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Selasa, 12 Juni 2012

Beta Amyloid May Be The Key To Diagnosis Of Alzheimer's In Healthy Patients

Main Category: Alzheimer's / Dementia




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An arsenal of Alzheimer's research revealed at the Society of Nuclear Medicine's 59th Annual Meeting indicates that beta-amyloid plaque in the brain not only is involved in the pathology of Alzheimer's disease but may also precede even mild cognitive decline. These and other studies advance molecular imaging for the early detection of beta-amyloid, for which one product is now approved in the United States , as a major push forward in the race for better treatments.

"Diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease can now be made when the patient first presents symptoms and still has largely preserved mental function," says Christopher Rowe, M.D., a lead investigator for the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle study of aging (AIBL) and professor of nuclear medicine at Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. "Previously there was an average delay of three years between consulting a doctor over memory concerns and the diagnosis of Alzheimer's, as the diagnosis required the presence of dementia. When used as an adjunct to other diagnostic measures, molecular imaging can help lead to earlier diagnosis. This may give the patient several years to prepare for dementia while they still have control over their destiny."


According to the World Health Organization, Alzheimer's disease affects an estimated 18 million people worldwide, and incidence of the disease is expected to double by the year 2025 to 34 million. The National Institute on Aging estimates that as many as 50 percent of Americans aged 85 or older are affected.


Alzheimer's disease is a chronic and currently incurable neurodegenerative disease. Beta-amyloid burden can begin to build in the brain several years, if not more than a decade, before an individual shows any sign of dementia. Those who go on to develop Alzheimer's disease not only lose their ability to remember their loved ones but also have difficulty with essential bodily functions such as breathing and swallowing in the late stages of disease.


In one study, researchers used a molecular imaging technique called positron emission tomography (PET), which images physiological patterns in the body. PET was combined with an imaging agent called F-18 florbetaben, which binds to amyloid in the brain. This and other PET agents are drawn to targets in the body and emit a positron signal that is picked up by a scanner. Here molecular imaging was performed in conjunction with clinical and neuropsychological testing in order to better understand the long-term effects of beta amyloid plaques in the brains of older individuals with mild cognitive impairment. Those of the 45 subjects in the study who showed high levels of imaging agent binding during imaging and atrophy of the hippocampus, the memory center, had an 80 percent chance of developing Alzheimer's disease within two years, researchers said.


"Molecular imaging is proving to be an essential part of Alzheimer's disease detection," says Rowe. "This and other amyloid imaging techniques will have an increasing role in the earlier and more accurate diagnosis of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease due to their ability to measure the actual underlying disease process."


Another AIBL study included 194 healthy participants, 92 people with mild cognitive impairment and 70 subjects with Alzheimer's disease, and used another imaging agent called C-11 PiB (Pittsburgh compound B) with PET to gauge amyloid burden in the brain. Researchers showed that, in this study group, widespread amyloid plaque build-up preceded cognitive impairment, and those with extensive amyloid burden were at higher risk of cognitive decline.


This and another study mark two of the first studies of their kind focusing on beta amyloid in healthy subjects. In the other study, 137 adults with normal cognitive function aged 30 to 89 years were imaged using PET with F-18 florbetapir, now FDA-approved for the detection of beta amyloid plaques, as well as functional magnetic resonance imaging in order to explore how amyloid build-up affects connections in specific areas of the brain involved in cognition, namely the default mode and salience networks, which are responsible for different states of wakeful rest and alertness. Those with increased amyloid burden in these neural networks were prone to impaired cognitive performance.


"The effect of beta amyloid in healthy aging is of great interest since this protein is strongly associated with Alzheimer's disease and may be predictive of the transition from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer's disease," says Michael Devous, Sr., Ph.D., director of neuroimaging at the Alzheimer's Disease Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. "Less is known about its impact on cognition in otherwise healthy aging individuals. In addition, brain connectivity in these areas is thought to be sensitive to early changes in brain function caused both by aging itself and by disease processes such as Alzheimer's disease."


Another study assessed the PET imaging agent C-11 PiB for its ability to detect amyloid plaque in comparison to another imaging agent, 18-F fluorodeoxyglucose (F-18 FDG). The latter acts like glucose, the brain's primary energy source, to map out the metabolic functioning of the brain. Results of the study showed C-11 PiB amyloid imaging to be a better means of evaluating amyloid patterns in the brain than F-18 FDG imaging. In addition, of the 100 healthy participants, 15 percent were shown to have some amyloid build-up when molecular imaging was performed.


"We are using state-of-the-art, noninvasive PET and MRI technologies to look at some of the earliest developments of Alzheimer's disease onset in the brains of normal middle-aged people," says Guofan Xu, M.D., Ph.D., lead author of the study and research scientist at the department of nuclear medicine and radiology at the University of Wisconsin located in Madison. "With this we can evaluate whether pathological changes associated with Alzheimer's disease are happening many years before onset of significant clinical symptoms."


No treatments are currently available to cure or prevent Alzheimer's disease. With advances in molecular imaging to detect beta amyloid plaques, researchers have an important new tool that may bring the medical community one step closer to making therapies and vaccines a reality for the disease.




Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our alzheimer's / dementia section for the latest news on this subject.

Scientific Paper 148: Kevin Ong, Victor Villemagne, Alex Bahar-Fuchs, Fiona Lamb and Christopher Rowe , Centre for PET, Austin Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Cornelia Reininger, Barbara Putz and Beate Rohde, Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany; and Colin Masters, Mental Health Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, "A two-year longitudinal assessment of Aß deposition in MCI with 18F-Florbetaben," SNM's 59th Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Fla.
Scientific Paper 299: Christopher Rowe and Victor Villemagne, , Centre for PET, Austin Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Kathryn Ellis, Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Belinda Brown and Ralph Martins, School of Exercise, Biomedical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia; Pierrick Bourgeat and Olivier Salvado, Australian e-Health Research Centre, CSIRO, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Noel Faux and Colin Masters, Mental Health Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; and David Ames, National Ageing Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, "Imaging and cognitive biomarkers as predictors of progression to Alzheimer's disease," SNM's 59th Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Fla.
Scientific Paper 300: Michael Devous, Radiology, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX; Kristen Kennedy, Karen Rodrigue, Andrew Hebrank, and Denise Park, Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX, "Beta-amyloid burden alters Default Mode and Salience Network connectivity related to impaired cognition in healthy adults," SNM's 59th Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Fla.
Scientific Paper 91: Guofan Xu and Lance Hall, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; Sterling Johnson, Sanjay Asthana and Mark Sager, Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center and Wisconsin Alzheimer's Institute, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; Bradley Christian, Waisman Brain Imaging Laboratory, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, "Visual assessment of 11C-PIB PET and 18F-FDG PET for detection of amyloid burden and abnormal metabolism among cognitively normal middle-aged adults with high risks for Alzheimer's disease," SNM's 59th Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Fla.
Society of Nuclear Medicine

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Society of Nuclear Medicine. "Beta Amyloid May Be The Key To Diagnosis Of Alzheimer's In Healthy Patients." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 12 Jun. 2012. Web.
12 Jun. 2012.




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Society of Nuclear Medicine. (2012, June 12). "Beta Amyloid May Be The Key To Diagnosis Of Alzheimer's In Healthy Patients." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/246436.php.




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Jumat, 01 Juni 2012

Researcher Calls For Expansion Of Programs To Identify Potential Drug Abusers And Protect Pain Patients

Main Category: Pain / Anesthetics
Also Included In: Alcohol / Addiction / Illegal Drugs;  Fibromyalgia;  Back Pain
Article Date: 01 Jun 2012 - 0:00 PDT

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Individual use of prescription opioids has increased four-fold since the mid-1990s, in part due to increased awareness of pain control for chronic conditions such as low back pain and fibromyalgia and a Joint Commission mandate that hospitals assess patients' pain as a "vital sign" along with their blood pressure and temperature. During the same timeframe, however, the number of people using these drugs recreationally, becoming addicted to them, and dying of overdoses has also shot up. Today, nearly three quarters of all fatal drug overdoses in the United States are due to prescription drugs - far outnumbering deaths from cocaine and heroin combined, and often outpacing car accidents as the top cause of preventable deaths.

A Perspective piece published online in the New England Journal of Medicine outlines a plan for an "ideal" prescription-drug monitoring program that would enable doctors, dentists, pharmacists, researchers and law enforcement officials to access real-time data on patients' prescription drug histories. The authors, medical toxicologists Jeanmarie Perrone, MD, an associate professor of Emergency Medicine in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and Lewis S. Nelson, MD, a professor of Emergency Medicine at the New York University School of Medicine, say that such programs would allow physicians to take better care of patients with legitimate pain issues as well as identify and intervene to help potential drug abusers, and cut the number of opioids in circulation for illegal sale.

"As the number of deaths associated with prescription-drug use surpasses the number of fatalities from motor-vehicle crashes in many states, we can learn from the success of auto-safety innovations that have mitigated mortality despite increased automobile use over the past three decades," the authors write. "We should initiate active safety measures to address the growing rates of illness and death associated with the pharmaceuticalization of the 21st century."

The idea of state-run prescription-drug monitoring programs dates back to federal legislation authored in 1993 - long before robust internet use and the development of electronic medical records or e-prescribing systems. Today, 42 states have programs, another six have enacted legislation to develop them, and federal agencies including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration have called for broadening the efforts. But clinician awareness about the tools is poor, and some states, including Pennsylvania, restrict physician access, opening the databases only to law enforcement officials.

The authors note that mounting attention regarding abuse potential of painkillers such as oxycodone and hydrocodone has impaired physician-patient relationships in cases of genuine chronic pain issues. For instance, some recommendations suggest obtaining samples from patients for urine drug screens, or asking them to sign so-called "pain contracts" in which they must agree not to sell or give their drugs away.

To avoid these unintended consequences and improve opportunities to identify and help drug abusers, Perrone and Nelson call for a drug-monitoring system to better inform physician prescribing. Among their recommendations: standardization of the type of information submitted to the databases, and a move toward the use of bar-coded prescription paper to more quickly log entries, or a robust e-prescribing system that would eliminate paper and the resulting prescription fraud and "doctor shopping" that contributes to illicit use of these controlled substances. They also suggest that the programs include tracking of drugs ranging from those with the most potential for abuse and addiction (oxycodone, for instance) to codeine cough suppressants and stimulant drugs that may be sold or misused for cognitive enhancement.

The authors cite several benefits to more robust drug-monitoring program, including the potential to provide clinicians with an early warning that a patient may need drug counseling or treatment -- and an opportunity to intervene while the patient is still in the medical setting. In addition, they believe these programs could help identify patients who are receiving multiple legitimate prescriptions from different prescribers and pharmacies and may be at risk of polypharmacy complications. As an added benefit, they note that prescribers could use the databases to monitor use of their own Drug Enforcement Administration number to detect forged or stolen prescriptions.

"Although updating an existing prescription-drug monitoring database to incorporate these 'ideal' goals would require additional support and money, the potential to protect the public health is substantial," Perrone says.

Perrone and Nelson will speak this week at the Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program National Meeting in Washington, D.C., where lawmakers will convene to discuss ways to make existing prescription-drug monitoring programs more user-friendly and compliant with health care privacy laws, and strategies to ensure that the data can be shared between states.

View drug information on Oxycodone and Aspirin.
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our pain / anesthetics section for the latest news on this subject.
Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. "Researcher Calls For Expansion Of Programs To Identify Potential Drug Abusers And Protect Pain Patients." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 1 Jun. 2012. Web.
1 Jun. 2012.


APA
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. (2012, June 1). "Researcher Calls For Expansion Of Programs To Identify Potential Drug Abusers And Protect Pain Patients." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/246025.php.

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A Simple Cooler Could Help Patients Battle Antibiotic-Resistant Tuberculosis

Main Category: Tuberculosis
Also Included In: Medical Devices / Diagnostics;  Compliance;  MRSA / Drug Resistance
Article Date: 01 Jun 2012 - 0:00 PDT

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Tuberculosis, now largely controlled in the industrialized world, remains a stubbornly persistent killer in most of Africa, as well as parts of Asia and South America. The spread of multidrug-resistant strains of TB has slowed progress against the devastating disease, which is estimated to strike more than 10 million people annually. Now a modified soft-drink cooler, developed by researchers at MIT's D-Lab, could make a dent in the disease's impact.

There are two big issues that physicians confront in trying to tackle drug-resistant TB strains in developing countries. First, the drugs used to treat the disease, which require several doses per day over a course of 18 months, must be kept at a controlled low temperature - in places where the availability of electricity is sparse and unreliable. And second, the drugs must be taken regularly, requiring continuous monitoring by health care workers.

Both issues could potentially be addressed by the cooler developed by researchers in the Little Devices Lab, a team of researchers within D-Lab who work to develop low-cost solutions to pressing medical needs.

D-Lab is a program of classes, workshops and labs at MIT, launched a decade ago by senior lecturer Amy Smith. The program now includes 13 classes on topics in health, mobility and energy, and is devoted to developing appropriate solutions to problems facing low-income people and communities around the world.

José Gómez-Márquez, the D-Lab instructor who runs the Little Devices group, says the team's breadbox-sized cooler was adapted from one designed to keep soft drinks cool. Dubbed "CoolComply," it can run on either plug-in power or solar cells, and contains circuitry to monitor the temperature inside and transmit an alarm if it rises too high. (Higher temperatures cause a gas to be released inside the medicine packets, which can make patients violently ill.)

In addition, to track compliance, each cooler records the exact date and time when the box is opened, which allows a single dose packet to be dispensed. A built-in cellphone transmitter sends information on temperature and cooler activity to a central health facility where the data can be stored and monitored.

The CoolComply team won a $100,000 award last fall as a Vodaphone Americas Foundation Wireless Innovation Project, as well as a $50,000 grant from the Harvard Catalyst. The awards will see the project through initial development and testing.

The idea originated with Kristian Olson and Aya Caldwell, physicians at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who told Gómez-Márquez about the pressing need to keep TB medicines cool and to verify patient compliance with the dosage regime.

At present, since many of the patients entering treatment lack access to refrigerators, they are instead provided with coolers requiring daily deliveries of ice; their compliance with the dosage regime is checked regularly by visiting health workers. Those constraints severely limit the number of patients who can be treated, Gómez-Márquez says. The daily ice deliveries cost $600 a year - about double the cost of the CoolComply system - and "ice doesn't send you a message" to show that medicine has been taken, he says.

Since last September, three prototype devices have undergone field testing in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; this summer the D-Lab team hopes to deploy at least 10 more there for further testing. Ultimately, the team hopes the devices can be produced locally and distributed by a small for-profit company set up for this purpose, fostering both better health and the creation of local jobs.

The wireless reporting system in the CoolComply device "solves the problem of having to visit the patient every day," Gómez-Márquez says. But getting to that point wasn't easy: The first prototypes built last summer by the team - which also includes D-Lab instructors Anna Young and Amit Ghandi - worked perfectly in the United States, but as soon as they arrived in Addis Ababa for field testing, "none of it worked," Gómez-Márquez says, because of unreliable signals from the local cellphone system. "We had to go back to the drawing board," he says. "We were in despair."

One problem, Ghandi says, was the design of the cooler's antenna. "You couldn't tell what was wrong by looking at it," he says, "but it wouldn't work in certain parts of Ethiopia." Finally, after switching to a different type of antenna and devising some tricks to make up for unexpected gaps in the system (such as the lack of a built-in timestamp on Ethiopian text messages), they were able to get a reliable device up and running.

That's par for the course for such projects, Gómez-Márquez says. "You want, during the first trip, for a lot of things to go wrong," he says. "That's why you go over there." The key thing for this project was enlisting local users to try out a new system under real-world conditions. "We found amazing engineers" at the Addis Ababa Institute of Technology, he says, who "did an enormous amount of work" to help get the system working.

These local engineers, in fact, were delighted to have the chance to work on such a project, which they could see was something that could be built and maintained within the country. Young says one of them told her, looking at an expensive MRI machine in the local hospital, "Nobody I know will ever use this." By contrast, he said of the new cooler, "This is something I can actually see being used by people I know."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our tuberculosis section for the latest news on this subject.
Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "A Simple Cooler Could Help Patients Battle Antibiotic-Resistant Tuberculosis." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 1 Jun. 2012. Web.
1 Jun. 2012.


APA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (2012, June 1). "A Simple Cooler Could Help Patients Battle Antibiotic-Resistant Tuberculosis." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/246023.php.

Please note: If no author information is provided, the source is cited instead.


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