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

Alzheimer's and vascular changes in the neck

2013-11-25
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Ellen Goldbaum
goldbaum@buffalo.edu
716-645-4605
University at Buffalo
Alzheimer's and vascular changes in the neck

Buffalo, N.Y. – Studies on Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia have long focused on what's happening inside the brain. Now an international research team studying Alzheimer's and mild cognitive impairment is reporting potentially significant findings on a vascular abnormality outside the brain.

The finding has potential implications for a better understanding of Alzheimer's and other neurological disorders associated with aging.

The pilot study was published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease Nov. 8 online ahead of print by researchers from the University at Buffalo, the University of Bradford in the United Kingdom and National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine in Taiwan. The authors caution that the study is small and that the results must be validated in larger, future studies.

They studied a hemodynamic abnormality in the internal jugular veins called jugular venous reflux or JVR. It occurs when the pressure gradient reverses the direction of blood flow in the veins, causing blood to leak backwards into the brain.

JVR occurs in certain physiological situations, if the internal jugular vein valves do not open and close properly, which occurs more frequently in the elderly. This reverse flow is also believed to impair cerebral venous drainage.

The brain's white matter is made of myelin and axons that enable communication between nerve cells.

"We were especially interested to find an association between JVR and white matter changes in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease and those with mild cognitive impairment," says Robert Zivadinov, MD, PhD, FAAN, professor of neurology at the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and senior author.

"Age-related white matter changes have long been associated with dementia and faster cognitive decline," he says. "To the best of our knowledge, our study is the first to show that JVR is associated with a higher frequency of white matter changes, which occur in patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease."

Ching-Ping Chung, the first author on the study and assistant professor of neurology at National Yang-Ming University, adds: "We are the first to observe that JVR may be associated with formation of these lesions in the brain, given the fact that Alzheimer's patients have more white matter lesions than healthy people.

"If this observation is validated in larger studies," she continues, "it could be significant for the development of new diagnostic tools and treatments for pathological white matter lesions developed in Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia."

White matter changes have been found to have a direct relationship to the buildup of amyloid plaque long seen as central to the development of Alzheimer's disease.

"The accumulation of amyloid plaque may result from the inability of cerebrospinal fluid to be properly cleared from the brain," says Clive Beggs, second author on the study and professor of medical engineering at the University of Bradford. In addition, he says, the study found that JVR appeared to be associated with dirty-appearing white matter, which is thought to represent early stage lesion formation.

"To the best of our knowledge, this is one of the first studies to explore the impact of dirty-appearing white matter in the elderly," Beggs continues. He adds that the significance of dirty-appearing white matter in the elderly needs more study.

The research involved 12 patients with Alzheimer's disease, 24 with mild cognitive impairment and 17 age-matched elderly controls. Participants underwent Doppler ultrasound exams and magnetic resonance imaging scans.

The impact of hemodynamic changes in veins from the brain to the neck has been the focus of numerous studies by Zivadinov and colleagues at UB and institutions worldwide.

"Given the major finding of our group in 2011 that both healthy controls and people with a variety of neurological diseases present with structural and hemodynamic changes of the extracranial venous system, we thought it was important to study how they might be involved in the development of Alzheimer's disease and other important neurodegenerative conditions," he explains.

Zivadinov notes that the frequency of JVR increases with aging and its accumulated effects on cerebral circulation may take many years to develop. Patients are likely to be asymptomatic for a long time, which would explain why the condition is seen in both healthy people and those with neurological diseases, he adds.



INFORMATION:

Co-authors besides Zivadinov, Chung and Beggs are Simon Shepherd of the Centre for Infection Control and Biophysics at the University of Bradford; Pei-Ning Wang, Chun-Yu Cheng and Han-Hwa Hu, all of Taipei Veterans General Hospital in Taipei and National Yang-Ming University; and Niels Bergsland, Deepa P. Ramasamy and Michael G. Dwyer all of the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center in the UB Department of Neurology.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Health Affairs Web First articles look at health care across many countries

2013-11-25
Health Affairs Web First articles look at health care across many countries Bethesda, MD – Shanghai's health care reforms as well as the findings of an eleven-country health care survey are published as Web First articles on Health Affairs' web site in November. Shanghai's ...

A new, flying jellyfish-like machine

2013-11-25
A new, flying jellyfish-like machine Researchers present simplified method of robotic flight at APS Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting in Pittsburgh

Gene-silencing study finds new targets for Parkinson's disease

2013-11-25
Gene-silencing study finds new targets for Parkinson's disease NIH study sheds light on treatment of related disorders Scientists at the National Institutes of Health have used RNA interference (RNAi) technology ...

Decay used to construct quantum information

2013-11-25
Decay used to construct quantum information Usually, when researchers work with quantum information, they do everything they can to prevent the information from decaying. Now researchers at the Niels Bohr Institute, among others, have flipped ...

Diamond 'flaws' pave way for nanoscale MRI

2013-11-25
Diamond 'flaws' pave way for nanoscale MRI By exploiting flaws in miniscule diamond fragments, researchers say they have achieved enough coherence of the magnetic moment inherent in these defects to harness their potential for precise quantum sensors in a ...

NIST demonstrates how losing information can benefit quantum computing

2013-11-25
NIST demonstrates how losing information can benefit quantum computing BOULDER, Colo -- Suggesting that quantum computers might benefit from losing some data, physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have entangled—linked ...

How living cells solved a needle in a haystack problem to produce electrical signals

2013-11-25
How living cells solved a needle in a haystack problem to produce electrical signals Filtered from a vast sodium sea, more than 1 million calcium ions per second gush through our cells' pores to generate charges Scientists have figured out how calcium channels – the infinitesimal ...

New genomic study provides a glimpse of how whales could adapt to ocean

2013-11-25
New genomic study provides a glimpse of how whales could adapt to ocean The latest study was published online in Nature Genetics November 24, 2013, Shenzhen, China - In a paper published in Nature Genetics, researchers from Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology, Korea Genome Research ...

Scientists prove X-ray laser can solve protein structures from scratch

2013-11-25
Scientists prove X-ray laser can solve protein structures from scratch SLAC's linac coherent light source reaches key milestone in decoding biological structures that were out of reach A study shows for the first time that X-ray lasers can ...

X-rays reveal another feature of high-temperature superconductivity

2013-11-25
X-rays reveal another feature of high-temperature superconductivity Discovery of a giant resonance puts these materials further apart Classical and high-temperature superconductors differ hugely in the value of the critical temperatures at which ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Want to improve early detection of diabetes? Look in the same households as those with abnormal blood sugar

Unveiling the gut-heart connection: The role of microbiota in heart failure

Breakthrough insights into tumor angiogenesis and endothelial cell origins

Unlocking the power of mitochondrial biogenesis to combat acute kidney injury

MIT study sheds light on graphite’s lifespan in nuclear reactors

The role of fucosylation in digestive diseases and cancer

Meet Allie, the AI-powered chess bot trained on data from 91 million games

Students’ image tool offers sharper signs, earlier detection in the lab or from space

UBC Okanagan study suggests fasting effects on the body are not the same for everyone

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Children’s Hospital Colorado researchers conduct first prospective study of pediatric EoE patients and disease progression

Harnessing VR to prevent substance use relapse

The 8,000-year history recorded in Great Salt Lake sediments

To craft early tools, ancient human relatives transported stones over long distances 600,000 years earlier than previously thought

Human embryo implantation recorded in real time for the first time

70 years of data show adaptation reducing Europe’s flood losses

Recapitulating egg and sperm development in the dish

Study reveals benefits of traditional Himalayan crops

Scientist uncover hidden immune “hubs” that drive joint damage in rheumatoid arthritis

Congress of Neurological Surgeons releases first guidelines on the care of patients with functioning pituitary adenomas

New discovery could lower heart attack and stroke risk for people with type 2 diabetes

Tumor electrophysiology in precision tumor therapy

AI revolution in medicine: how large language models are transforming drug development

Hidden contamination in DNA extraction kits threatens accuracy of global zoonotic surveillance

Slicing and dictionaries: a new approach to medical big data

60 percent of the world’s land area is in a precarious state

Thousands of kids in mental health crisis are stuck for days in hospital emergency rooms, study finds

Prices and affordability of essential medicines in 72 low-, middle-, and high-income markets

Space mice babies

FastUKB: A revolutionary tool for simplifying UK Biobank data analysis

Mount Sinai returns as official hospital and medical services provider of the US Open Tennis Championships

[Press-News.org] Alzheimer's and vascular changes in the neck