PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Glucose intolerance, diabetes or insulin resistance not linked with pathological features of AD

2013-07-30
(Press-News.org) Glucose intolerance or insulin resistance do not appear to be associated with pathological features of Alzheimer disease (AD) or detection of the accumulation of the brain protein β-amyloid (Αβ), according to a report published by JAMA Neurology, a JAMA Network publication.

Glucose intolerance and diabetes mellitus have been proposed as risk factors for the development of AD, but evidence of this has not been consistent, the study background notes.

Madhav Thambisetty, M.D., Ph.D., of the National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, and colleagues investigated the association between glucose intolerance and insulin resistance and brain Αβ burden with autopsies and imaging with carbon 11-labeled Pittsburgh Compound B positron emission tomography.

"The relationship among diabetes mellitus, insulin and AD is an important area of investigation. However, whether cognitive impairment seen in those with diabetes is mediated by excess pathological features of AD or other related abnormalities, such as vascular disease, remains unclear," the authors comment.

Two groups of participants were involved in the study. One group consisted of 197 participants enrolled in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging who had two or more oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) while they were alive and then underwent a brain autopsy when they died. The second group included 53 living study participants who had two or more OGTTs and underwent imaging.

"In this prospective cohort with multiple assessments of glucose intolerance and insulin resistance, measures of glucose and insulin homeostasis are not associated with AD pathology and likely play little role in AD pathogenesis," the study concludes. "Long-term therapeutic trials are important to elucidate this issue." ### (JAMA Neurol. Published online July 29, 2013. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.284. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: This study was supported by grants from the National Institute on Aging, by the Burroughs Wellcome Fund for Translational Research and by the Intramural Research Program, NIA, National Institutes of Health. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Physicians should counsel patients about sex life after cardiac event

2013-07-30
Healthcare professionals are urged to counsel heart and stroke patients on how to resume a healthy sex life, according to a joint statement published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation and the European Heart Journal. It is the first scientific statement to offer detailed guidance for patients. "Patients are anxious and often afraid sex will trigger another cardiac event – but the topic sometimes gets passed over because of embarrassment or discomfort," said Elaine Steinke, A.P.R.N., Ph.D., lead author of the statement and professor of nursing at Wichita ...

BIDMC study suggests worsening trends in back pain management

2013-07-30
BOSTON – Patient care could be enhanced and the health care system could see significant cost savings if health care professionals followed published clinical guidelines to manage and treat back pain, according to researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and published in the July 29 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine. "Back pain treatment is costly and frequently includes overuse of treatments that are not supported by clinical guidelines, and that don't impact outcomes," says lead author John N. Mafi, MD, a fellow in the Division of General Medicine and Primary ...

NIH researchers identify therapy that may curb kidney deterioration in patients with rare disorder

2013-07-30
A team led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health has overcome a major biological hurdle in an effort to find improved treatments for patients with a rare disease called methylmalonic acidemia (MMA). Using genetically engineered mice created for their studies, the team identified a set of biomarkers of kidney damage—a hallmark of the disorder—and demonstrated that antioxidant therapy protected kidney function in the mice. Researchers at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of NIH, validated the same biomarkers in 46 patients with MMA ...

NIH math model predicts effects of diet, physical activity on childhood weight

2013-07-30
Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have created and confirmed the accuracy of a mathematical model that predicts how weight and body fat in children respond to adjustments in diet and physical activity. The results will appear online July 30 in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology. While the model may help to set realistic expectations, it has not been tested in a controlled clinical trial to determine if it is an effective tool for weight management. The model evolved from one developed at the NIH in 2011 to predict weight change in adults. The model ...

Social amoebae travel with a posse

2013-07-30
In 2011, Nature announced that scientists had discovered a single-celled organism that is a primitive farmer. The organism, a social amoeba called Dictyostelium discoideum, picks up edible bacteria, carries them to new locations and harvests them like crops. D. discoideum enjoyed a brief spell in the media spotlight, billed as the world's smallest farmer. Now a collaboration of scientists at Washington University in St. Louis and Harvard University has taken a closer look at one lineage, or clone, of a D. discoideum farmer. This farmer carries not one but two strains ...

Understanding why male mammals choose monogamy

2013-07-30
In perhaps the most comprehensive and definitive effort to date, scientists have explained the processes that drove male mammals to adopt social monogamy as a breeding strategy. Because male mammals have a much higher potential to produce offspring in a single breeding season than do their female counterparts (who must endure long gestation periods), it would seem that mating with one female per cycle would be limiting. Yet a percentage of mammalian males do this -- and researchers have debated why, seeking to identify selective advantages social monogamy offers, for ...

Natural affinities -- unrecognized until now -- may have set stage for life to ignite

2013-07-30
The chemical components crucial to the start of life on Earth may have primed and protected each other in never-before-realized ways, according to new research led by University of Washington scientists. It could mean a simpler scenario for how that first spark of life came about on the planet, according to Sarah Keller, UW professor of chemistry, and Roy Black, UW affiliate professor of bioengineering, both co-authors of a paper published online July 29 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Scientists have long thought that life started when the right ...

New modular vaccine design combines best of existing vaccine technologies

2013-07-30
Boston, Mass.—A new method of vaccine design, called the Multiple Antigen Presentation System (MAPS), may result in vaccines that bring together the benefits of whole-cell and acellular or defined subunit vaccination. The method, pioneered by researchers at Boston Children's Hospital, permits rapid construction of new vaccines that activate mulitple arms of the immune system simultaneously against one or more pathogens, generating robust immune protection with a lower risk of adverse effects. As reported by Fan Zhang, PhD, Ying-Jie Lu, PhD, and Richard Malley, MD, from ...

Capturing black hole spin could further understanding of galaxy growth

2013-07-30
Astronomers have found a new way of measuring the spin in supermassive black holes, which could lead to better understanding about how they drive the growth of galaxies. The scientists at Durham University, UK, observed a black hole - with mass 10 million times that of our Sun - at the centre of a spiral galaxy 500 million light years from Earth while it was feeding on the surrounding disc of material that fuels its growth and powers its activity. By viewing optical, ultra-violet and soft x-rays generated by heat as the black hole fed, they were able to measure how ...

Could sleeping stem cells hold key to treatment of aggressive blood cancer?

2013-07-30
Scientists studying an aggressive form of leukaemia have discovered that rather than displacing healthy stem cells in the bone marrow as previously believed, the cancer is putting them to sleep to prevent them forming new blood cells. The finding offers the potential that these stem cells could somehow be turned back on, offering a new form of treatment for the condition, called Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML). The work was led by scientists at Queen Mary, University of London with the support of Cancer Research UK's London Research Institute. Around 2,500* people are diagnosed ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Are the rest of podcasters history? AI-generated podcasts open new doors to make science accessible

Two frontiers: Illinois experts combine forces to develop novel nanopore sensing platform

Biotechnology governance entreaties released, echoing legacy of 1975 recombinant DNA guidelines

Review of active distribution network reconfiguration: Past progress and future directions

Revealing the lives of planet-forming disks

What’s really in our food? A global look at food composition databases and the gaps we need to fix

Racial differences in tumor collagen structure may impact cancer prognosis

Museomics highlights the importance of scientific museum collections

Fossil corals point to possibly steeper sea level rise under a warming world

The quantum mechanics of chiral spin selectivity

Bodybuilding in ancient times: How the sea anemone got its back

Science and innovation for a sustainable future

Strange radio pulses detected coming from ice in Antarctica

Amazon trees under pressure: New study reveals how forest giants handle light and heat

Cell-depleting treatment in severe RMD: New data

Vasodilation in systemic sclerosis

New ideas in gout management

Risk factors for progression in spondyloarthritis

Patient experiences In JIA

Patient organizations: The partner by your side

Nurses: A critical role for people with RMD

Online information for patients needs guidance

The many ways that AI enters rheumatology

Pregnancy outcomes in autoinflammatory disease

The value of physical activity for people with RMD

First data from the EULAR RheumaFacts project

Research spotlight: Preventing stalling to improve CAR-T cells’ efficacy against tumors

c-Fos expression differentially acts in the healthy brain compared with Alzheimer’s disease

Computed tomography perfusion and angiography for death by neurologic criteria

New tool could help Florida homeowners weather flood risks, lower insurance costs

[Press-News.org] Glucose intolerance, diabetes or insulin resistance not linked with pathological features of AD