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

Mild memory & thinking issues: What works, what doesn't? U-M experts weigh the evidence

New guide based on comprehensive review of recent studies can help doctors & patients navigate mild cognitive impairment

2014-12-16
(Press-News.org) ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- For up to one in five Americans over age 65, getting older brings memory and thinking problems- along with the embarrassment of not being as "sharp" as they once were, and the worry that it will get much worse.

They might just call it "getting older". But officially, when memory or cognitive problems don't interfere significantly with daily living, doctors call them mild cognitive impairment, or MCI.

What can be done to prevent or slow MCI? And how much should seniors fear that their thinking or memory problems will get much worse? A pair of doctors from the University of Michigan Medical School and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System have put together a definitive look at the evidence, based on a thorough review of recent studies about MCI.

Published in this week's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, their review article should help doctors and the seniors they treat.

"MCI is hard for both clinicians and for patients and their families, because it's a scary prospect - and because there's still a lot we don't know about this condition," says Kenneth Langa, M.D., Ph.D., who co-authored the article with U-M and VA colleague Deborah Levine, M.D., MPH. "We still don't have great answers to give patients and families, but the medical literature shows there are certainly factors that can influence the risk, severity, and progression of MCI. We hope this review will spread awareness of those, and help guide patient care."

"While no medications have been proven to treat MCI successfully," says Levine, "it's still a treatable condition. Our review shows good evidence that aerobic exercise, mental activity, social engagement, and stroke prevention help reduce the risk of further cognitive decline." She notes that the review of medical literature they conducted paid close attention to the quality of the evidence in each study.

Among the key findings of their review, and what they mean for seniors:

Speak up to your doctor about memory and thinking problems: The new paper offers doctors a step-by-step guide for what to do when a patient or his or her caregiver mentions concerns about memory and thinking problems. Specific lab tests for things like vitamin deficiencies, standard cognitive tests and a full physical and neurological exam can reveal important clues to factors that might be causing their symptoms.

Keep body and brain active: A number of studies have indicated that aerobic exercise and mental activities can have a small beneficial effect on thinking ability in older adults with MCI.

Keeping a stroke at bay helps the brain too: Since strokes are brain injuries caused by clots or holes in the blood vessels that keep brain tissue healthy, it makes sense that preventing a stroke can preserve memory and thinking ability. People who have had mini-strokes or survived a full-blown stroke should especially focus on preventing new strokes to keep their brain function as intact as possible as they age, Langa and Levine advise based on the evidence they reviewed. So should people diagnosed with MCI. Having a stroke can worsen cognition and raises the risk of progressing on to dementia.

Stroke prevention strategies include controlling high blood pressure, stopping smoking, lowering cholesterol with drugs called statins and taking aspirin or other medicines to prevent blood clots.

Multiple medicines can fog the brain: Many seniors have prescriptions for a number of medications, and take over-the-counter drugs and supplements, to address their various health risks and conditions. These may have been prescribed or recommended by different doctors - who don't always know or ask what else a patient is taking. But, say Langa and Levine, studies show that multiple drugs can interact with one another and affect memory and thinking. Doctors and seniors should review all drugs and supplements and see if any interactions can be prevented by reducing the number of medications the patient takes, or stopping drugs that aren't needed after a hospital stay.

Avoid over-treatment of high blood pressure and diabetes: While it is important to control blood pressure and diabetes to prevent harmful consequences, doctors need to be careful not to overdo it. "It is important to avoid overtreatment of high blood pressure and diabetes because low blood pressure and low blood sugar may increase the risk of cognitive decline and other patient harms," says Langa.

What are the odds?: That's the key question in the mind of anyone with suspected or diagnosed MCI - how likely are they to get worse and progress to dementia and not be able to function independently. Reassuringly, Levine says, the evidence available shows that progression from MCI is far from a sure thing. "The numbers are less scary than many people believe," she notes. "The majority of people with MCI will not progress to dementia and loss of independence, even after 10 years. Some patients with MCI will actually have improved cognition after a year or two, if their cognitive test scores were brought down by an acute illness that gets addressed." Older adults with MCI are 12 times more likely to die from cardiovascular disease than to die of dementia. So, preventing stroke and heart attack by controlling vascular risk factors is crucial for people diagnosed with MCI.

More evidence needed for a number of new detection/treatment options: The review of the literature showed that a number of new blood tests and brain imaging options have been proposed and preliminarily tested for diagnosing MCI, and tracking or predicting its progression to dementia. But many of these tests haven't yet been proven to offer significant benefit to patients, says Langa. And in fact, there can be some risk of "over-diagnosis" when a test identifies a problem that would not go on to cause significant problems for a patient.

In the end, he says, MCI can be a complicated issue, and that can make it even scarier for patients and their families. More research is needed on the factors that put someone at increased risk of MCI, new options for treating it, and better research on what the risk of progression to dementia is. But until new findings are available, this new review should help doctors and patients alike.

INFORMATION:

Both Langa and Levine are faculty members in the Division of General Medicine at the U-M Medical School, and members of the U-M institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation. Langa also holds positions in the U-M Institute for Social Research and School of Public Health. Levine has a joint appointment in the U-M Department of Neurology. The review article is part of the Care of the Aging Parent series, funded by the SCAN Foundation. Reference: JAMA, Dec. 17, 2014, Vol. 312 No. 23 END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Real-time radiation monitor can reduce radiation exposure for medical workers

Real-time radiation monitor can reduce radiation exposure for medical workers
2014-12-16
DALLAS - Dec. 16, 2014 - It's a sound that saves. A "real-time" radiation monitor that alerts by beeping in response to radiation exposure during cardiac-catheterization procedures significantly reduces the amount of exposure that medical workers receive, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers found. In a randomized study, the researchers divided 505 patients undergoing either diagnostic coronary angiography or percutaneous coronary intervention, such as stent placement, into two groups. In half the procedures, medical workers used the current gold standard for radiation ...

Low glycemic diet does not improve risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes

2014-12-16
Boston, MA-- Nutrition experts are continually debating the nutritional value of carbohydrate-containing foods and whether some are healthier than others. High carbohydrate foods are classified by how much they increase blood sugar; known as glycemic index. In new findings led by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) in Boston and Johns Hopkins University (JHU) in Baltimore, researchers looked at glycemic index' effect on cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes and found that low glycemic diets did not improve insulin sensitivity or cardiovascular risk factors. ...

Big-data analysis reveals gene sharing in mice

Big-data analysis reveals gene sharing in mice
2014-12-16
HOUSTON - (Dec. 16, 2014) - Rice University scientists have detected at least three instances of cross-species mating that likely influenced the evolutionary paths of "old world" mice, two in recent times and one in the distant past. The researchers think these instances of introgressive hybridization -- a way for genetic material and, potentially, traits to be passed from one species to another through interspecific mating -- are only the first of many needles waiting to be found in a very large genetic haystack. While introgressive hybridization is thought to be common ...

How information moves between cultures

2014-12-16
By analyzing data on multilingual Twitter users and Wikipedia editors and on 30 years' worth of book translations in 150 countries, researchers at MIT, Harvard University, Northeastern University, and Aix Marseille University have developed network maps that they say represent the strength of the cultural connections between speakers of different languages. This week, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they show that a language's centrality in their network -- as defined by both the number and the strength of its connections -- better predicts the ...

More than half of all children in the US will likely live with an unmarried mother

More than half of all children in the US will likely live with an unmarried mother
2014-12-16
PRINCETON, N.J.--More than half of all American children will likely live with an unmarried mother at some point before they reach age 18, according to a report issued by Princeton University and Harvard University. The absence of a biological father increases the likelihood that a child will exhibit antisocial behaviors like aggression, rule-breaking and delinquency, the researchers report in the journal EducationNext. This finding - which holds true regardless of a child's race - is especially prevalent among young boys. As a result, these children are 40 percent less ...

Microbiome may have shaped early human populations

2014-12-16
We humans have an exceptional age structure compared to other animals: Our children remain dependent on their parents for an unusually long period and our elderly live an extremely long time after they have stopped procreating. Could the microscopic fellow travelers that consider the human body to be their home - collectively known as the microbiome - have played an active role in shaping and maintaining this unusual aspect of human nature? That is the speculative proposition advanced by Martin Blaser, professor of medicine and microbiology at NYU's Langone Medical ...

Syracuse biologist reveals how whales may 'sing' for their supper

Syracuse biologist reveals how whales may sing for their supper
2014-12-16
Humpback whales have a trick or two, when it comes to finding a quick snack at the bottom of the ocean. But how they pinpoint that meal at night, with little or no available light, remains a mystery. Susan Parks, assistant professor of Biology in Syracuse University's College of Arts and Sciences, in collaboration with a consortium of other researchers, has been studying these unique feeding behaviors. Her research emphasizes the importance of specific auditory cues that these mammoth creatures emit, as they search the deep ocean for their prey. Her findings are the ...

New method identifies genome-wide off-target cleavage sites of CRISPR-Cas nucleases

2014-12-16
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have developed a method of detecting, across the entire genome of human cells, unwanted DNA breaks induced by use of the popular gene-editing tools called CRISPR-Cas RNA-guided nucleases (RGNs). Members of the same team that first described these off-target effects in human cells describe their new platform, called Genome-wide Unbiased Indentification of DSBs Evaluated by Sequencing (GUIDE-seq), in a report being published online in Nature Biotechnology. "GUIDE-seq is the first genome-wide method of sensitively detecting ...

Use of alcohol, cigarettes, number of illicit drugs declines among US teens

2014-12-16
ANN ARBOR--A national survey of students in U.S. middle schools and high schools shows some important improvements in levels of substance use. Both alcohol and cigarette use in 2014 are at their lowest points since the study began in 1975. Use of a number of illicit drugs also show declines this year. These findings come from the University of Michigan's Monitoring the Future study, which tracks trends in substance use among students in 8th, 10th and 12th grades. Each year the national study, now in its 40th year, surveys 40,000 to 50,000 students in about 400 secondary ...

Back to the future? Past global warming period echoes today's

Back to the future? Past global warming period echoes todays
2014-12-16
The rate at which carbon emissions warmed Earth's climate almost 56 million years ago resembles modern, human-caused global warming much more than previously believed, but involved two pulses of carbon to the atmosphere, researchers have found. The findings mean that the so-called Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, or PETM, can provide clues to the future of modern climate change. The good news: Earth and most species survived. The bad news: It took millennia to recover from the episode, when temperatures rose by 5 to 8 degrees Celsius (9 to 15 degrees Fahrenheit). ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Breakthrough in noninvasive monitoring of molecular processes in deep tissue

BU researcher named rising star in endocrinology

Stressed New Yorkers can now seek care at Mount Sinai’s new resilience-focused medical practice

BU researchers uncover links between metabolism and aggressive breast cancer

Engineers took apart batteries from Tesla and China’s leading EV manufacturer to see what’s inside

Paralyzed man moves robotic arm with his thoughts

Planetary science: More potential locations for ice on Moon

Injectable Therapy is 'magic' for those who can’t take HIV pills

siRNA-AGO2 complex inhibits bacterial gene translation: a novel therapeutic strategy for superbug infection

Memory is impaired in aged rats after 3 days of high-fat eating

Artificial muscles for tremor suppression

A new way to engineer composite materials

AERA selects 29 exemplary scholars as 2025 Fellows

Touchless tech: Control fabrics with a wave of your finger

JMIR aging invites submissions on the social and cultural drivers of health in aging adults

New research sheds light on why scleroderma affects mostly women and how to treat it

Lack of appropriate mental health care impacts quality of life for people with COPD

Yawn! Many people are bored by spiritual practice

A new algorithm sheds light on ‘disordered’ proteins

How’s the weather on Mars?

Plants struggled for millions of years after the world’s worst climate catastrophe

Clinical trial opens to study groundbreaking 3D printed device for babies with rare respiratory disease

Effects of shenfu decoction on neutrophil chemotactic function in septic mice

ESMT Berlin offers scholarships in executive leadership

New WSU study shows how scarcity pricing helps 'cult wineries' drive demand

New discovery and grant to accelerate Strep A vaccine efforts

Novel enzyme found in gut bacteria could revolutionize prebiotic research

Study reveals exposure to wildlife and forest walks helps ease symptoms of PTSD in US war veterans

Urban highways cut opportunities for social relationships, says study

Alzheimer’s treatment may lie in the brain’s own cleanup crew

[Press-News.org] Mild memory & thinking issues: What works, what doesn't? U-M experts weigh the evidence
New guide based on comprehensive review of recent studies can help doctors & patients navigate mild cognitive impairment