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

Circulation problems in the brain’s seat of memory linked to mild cognitive impairment in older adults

Based on a new USC-led study, researchers suggest adding blood vessel health to dementia diagnostics

2025-01-14
(Press-News.org) Mild cognitive impairment is linked to blood vessel dysfunction in the brain’s temporal lobes — the seat of memory — according to a new USC-led study.

The findings, seen in people with and without signs of amyloid buildup in the brain, suggest that microvascular trouble may be an important, early biomarker for dementia as well as a potential target for therapy.

The research, involving scientists from multiple universities, appears in the journal Neurology.

“We’re studying the ability of these very small vessels to respond to stimuli and to dilate, and they’re showing dysfunction in people who have memory problems,” said senior author Daniel Nation, a professor of gerontology and medicine at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology. “It could implicate blood vessel dysfunction in a very early stage of memory loss. It happened whether or not people had Alzheimer’s-related brain changes. They still had this blood vessel problem if they had memory issues.”

New biomarker for dementia

For the study, researchers recruited a sample of 144 older, independently living adults from the community. The volunteers took a neuropsychological assessment, gave blood samples and underwent brain MRI, or magnetic resonance imaging.

During MRI, volunteers held their breath for 15-second intervals, an exercise designed to dilate the brain’s blood vessels, a natural process called “cerebrovascular reactivity” which regulates oxygen levels in the brain.

Researchers paid special attention blood vessels supplying the temporal lobes, located on the sides of the head, near the ears. Participants whose blood vessels didn’t dilate properly showed signs of cognitive impairment.

“With this approach, we can pinpoint the problem to the blood vessels and their ability to dilate. That’s not the way people usually think about memory impairment in older adults,” Nation said. “There’s an increasing realization that the main cause of dementia is not actually Alzheimer’s disease, it’s mixed pathology. If you just focus on amyloid, you’re certainly not going to get the full picture. Maybe this technique should be incorporated into our diagnostic approaches.”

"Our findings underscore the need to focus on vascular health as a critical factor in memory decline," said first author Arunima Kapoor, a graduate student at University of California, Irvine.

Nation said that some blood pressure drugs may potentially protect vascular function in a way that preserves memory, but more research is needed.

About this study

In addition to Nation and Kapoor, other authors include John Paul Alitin, Trevor Lohman, Isabel Sible, Anisa Marshall, Aimee Gaubert, Xingfeng Shao and Danny Wang, all of USC; Shubir Dutt of University of California, San Francisco; Allison Engstrom and Fatemah Shenasa, Lorena Sordo and Elizabeth Head, all of University of California, Irvine; and David Robert Bradford and Kathleen Rodgers of University of Arizona.

The research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants R01AG064228, R01AG060049, R01AG082073, P01AG052350, P30AG066530, and a grant from the American Heart Association, 23PRE1014192.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Oregon State receives $11.9 million from Defense Department to enhance health of armed forces

Oregon State receives $11.9 million from Defense Department to enhance health of armed forces
2025-01-13
PORTLAND, Ore. – The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded up to $11.9 million to Oregon State University to invent new drug delivery technologies for protecting members of the military from a range of health threats in combat areas. Once designed, developed and tested, the technologies could also be applied as needed within the general public, said OSU College of Pharmacy nanomedicine researcher Gaurav Sahay, the project leader. The award comes from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency through its Hermes program, whose goal is finding new ways to deliver therapeutic agents throughout the body with exceptional ...

Leading cancer clinician, researcher Dr. Jenny Chang to lead Houston Methodist Academic Institute

Leading cancer clinician, researcher Dr. Jenny Chang to lead Houston Methodist Academic Institute
2025-01-13
Esteemed cancer clinician-scientist Jenny Chang, M.D., MBBChir, MHCM, has been chosen to lead the Houston Methodist Academic Institute. She will serve as executive vice president, president and CEO, and chief academic officer. In her more than 15 years at Houston Methodist, Chang helped transform the Dr. Mary and Ron Neal Cancer Center into one of the top-20 ranked cancer centers in the country. Chang, the Emily Herrmann Presidential Distinguished Chair in Cancer Research, was selected following a national search and succeeds H. Dirk Sostman, M.D., FACR, who will retire next month after two decades of leadership at Houston Methodist. Chang’s ...

Engineering quantum entanglement at the nanoscale

Engineering quantum entanglement at the nanoscale
2025-01-13
Physicists have spent more than a century measuring and making sense of the strange ways that photons, electrons, and other subatomic particles interact at extremely small scales. Engineers have spent decades figuring out how to take advantage of these phenomena to create new technologies. In one such phenomenon, called quantum entanglement, pairs of photons become interconnected in such a way that the state of one photon instantly changes to match the state of its paired photon, no matter how far apart they are.  Nearly 80 years ago, Albert Einstein referred to this phenomenon as "spooky action at a distance." Today, entanglement is the subject of research ...

Researchers develop breakthrough one-step flame retardant for cotton textiles

2025-01-13
Although extremely flammable, cotton is one of the most commonly used textiles due to its comfort and breathable nature. However, in a single step, researchers from Texas A&M University can reduce the flammability of cotton using a polyelectrolyte complex coating. The coating can be tailored for various textiles, such as clothing or upholstery, and scaled using the common pad-dry coating process, which is suitable for industrial applications. This technology can help to save property and lives on a large scale.     “Many of the materials in our ...

New study identifies how blood vessel dysfunction can worsen chronic disease

New study identifies how blood vessel dysfunction can worsen chronic disease
2025-01-13
Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University have uncovered how specialized cells surrounding small blood vessels, known as perivascular cells, contribute to blood vessel dysfunction in chronic diseases such as cancer, diabetes and fibrosis. The findings, published today in Science Advances, could change how these diseases are treated. The study, led by Luiz Bertassoni, D.D.S., Ph.D., founding director of the Knight Cancer Precision Biofabrication Hub and a professor at the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute and ...

Picking the right doctor? AI could help

2025-01-13
Years ago, as she sat in waiting rooms, Maytal Saar-Tsechansky began to wonder how people chose a good doctor when they had no way of knowing a doctor’s track record on accurate diagnoses. Talking to other patients, she found they sometimes based choices on a physician’s personality or even the quality of their office furniture. “I realized all these signals people are using are just not the right ones,” says Saar-Tsechansky, professor of information, risk, and operations management at Texas McCombs. “We were operating in complete darkness, like there’s no transparency on these things.” In new research, she uses artificial ...

Travel distance to nearest lung cancer facility differs by racial and ethnic makeup of communities

2025-01-13
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 13 January 2025    @Annalsofim          Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf ...

UTA’s student success strategy earns national acclaim

UTA’s student success strategy earns national acclaim
2025-01-13
The University of Texas at Arlington has been recognized nationally for its commitment to student success and economic mobility, being named a winner in the inaugural Postsecondary Success Recognition Program (PSRP), a U.S. Department of Education initiative. This program honors institutions that excel in enrolling underserved student populations, supporting successful student transfers and completions and preparing graduates for careers that promote economic mobility. UTA was one of only three bachelor’s degree–granting institutions across the nation ...

Wind turbines impair the access of bats to water bodies in agricultural landscapes

Wind turbines impair the access of bats to water bodies in agricultural landscapes
2025-01-13
Bats depend on open bodies of water such as small ponds and lakes for foraging and drinking. Access to water is particularly important for survival in the increasingly hot and dry summers caused by climate change, the time when female bats are pregnant and rear their young. A scientific team from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) has now shown that access to drinking sites is hampered by wind turbines in agricultural landscapes: Many bat species avoid the turbines and water bodies ...

UCF biology researchers win awards from NOAA to support critical coastal work

2025-01-13
Biology researchers in the College of Sciences and UCF Coastal have received two awards from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) totaling more than $2.3 million. A new $1.1 million award to UCF from NOAA Sea Grant as part of the Marine Debris Challenge Competition will fund joint research between UCF’s CEELAB and Aquatic Biogeochemistry Laboratory’s research on plastic-free restored habitats in coastal shorelines and oyster reefs. UCF’s work, in partnership with Texas A&M, and University of Texas Marine Science Institute was selected as one of 11 projects ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SNU researchers develop world’s first technology to observe atomic structural changes of nanoparticles in 3D

SNU researchers develop a new synthesis technology of single crystal 2D semiconductors, “Hypotaxy,” to enhance the commercialization of next-generation 2D semiconductors

Graphene production method offers green alternative to mining

Researchers discover a cause of leptin resistance—and how to reverse it

Heat from the sun affects seismic activity on Earth

Postoperative aspiration pneumonia among adults using GLP-1 receptor agonists

Perceived discrimination in health care settings and care delays in patients with diabetes and hypertension

Postoperative outcomes following preweekend surgery

Nearly 4 of 10 Americans report sports-related mistreatment

School absence patterns could ID children with chronic GI disorders, research suggests

Mount Sinai researchers identify molecular glues that protect insulin-producing cells from damage related to diabetes

Study: Smartwatches could end the next pandemic

Equal distribution of wealth is bad for the climate

Evidence-based strategies improve colonoscopy bowel preparation quality, performance, and patient experience 

E. (Sarah) Du, Ph.D., named Senior Member, National Academy of Inventors

Study establishes “ball and chain” mechanism inactivates key mammalian ion channel

Dicamba drift: New use of an old herbicide disrupts pollinators

Merging schools to reduce segregation

Ending pandemics with smartwatches

Mapping consensus locations for offshore wind

Breakthrough in clean energy: Palladium nanosheets pave way for affordable hydrogen

Novel stem cell therapy repairs irreversible corneal damage in clinical trial

News article or big oil ad? As native advertisements mislead readers on climate change, Boston University experts identify interventions

Advanced genetic blueprint could unlock precision medicine

Study: World’s critical food crops at imminent risk from rising temperatures

Chemistry: Triple bond formed between boron and carbon for the first time

How a broken bone from arm wrestling led to a paradigm shift in mental health: Exercise as a first-line treatment for depression

Alarming levels of microplastics discovered in human brain tissue, linked to dementia

Global neurology leader makes The Neuro world's first open science institute

Alpha particle therapy emerges as a potent weapon against neuroendocrine tumours

[Press-News.org] Circulation problems in the brain’s seat of memory linked to mild cognitive impairment in older adults
Based on a new USC-led study, researchers suggest adding blood vessel health to dementia diagnostics