(Press-News.org) REM sleep disturbances constitute an early marker of neurodegenerative diseases. This was demonstrated by the Multidisciplinary Sleep Disturbances Unit of the Hospital Clínic, in an article published in 2006. A new study published by the same team in Lancet Neurology applies neuroimaging techniques to identify patients with REM sleep disturbances who will develop neurodegenerative disorders over the short term. The first signing author of both papers is Dr. Àlex Iranzo, a physician belonging to the Neurology Department of the Hospital Clínic in Barcelona, who is also an investigator of the IDIBAPS and a member of the Multidisciplinary Sleep Disturbances Unit. The study has been carried out in the setting of the Neurodegenerative Diseases CIBER (CIBERNED), and has received the collaboration of the Neurology Department of the Innsbruck Medical University (Austria).
One of the challenges of modern medicine is the diagnosis of diseases before they develop clinical manifestations such as tremor or dementia. Neurodegenerative disorders begin in latent periods during which the cells suffer degeneration but clinical manifestations are not yet observed. In this context, the degenerative process advances, and neuropathological changes affect the nervous system. The new data contributed by the investigators of the Hospital Clínic – IDIBAPS, and published in Lancet Neurology, make it possible to identify the disease at preclinical stages in patients with REM sleep disturbances.
In the previous work of this same team, 45% of the patients studied had developed a neurodegenerative disorder 5 years after diagnosis of the sleep disturbance. All of them were over 60 years of age and presented REM sleep disturbances in the form of nightmares in which they called out, cried or showed body movements. The new study goes beyond this point and presents the data relating to the follow-up of 43 new patients during two years and a half after undergoing the neuroimaging tests. The 123I-FP-CIT SPECT technique makes it possible to identify striatal dopamine dysfunctions typical of brain substantia nigra pathology, which can degenerate towards Parkinson's disease. Transcranial ultrasound identifies structural alterations of the substantia nigra such as increased iron presence, before Parkinsonism gives rise to clinical manifestations.
The study describes how 19% of the patients had developed a neurodegenerative disorder in the two and a half years following the neuroimaging tests. Of these subjects, 5 developed Parkinson's disease, two developed Lewy body dementia, and one patient developed multisystemic atrophy. All of them belonged to the group of 27 patients (62.8%) showing low FP-CIT uptake at SPECT and/or hyperechogenicity in the substantia nigra in transcranial ultrasound. In other words, none of them had yielded normal results in the neuroimaging tests. In turn, the patients with normal neuroimaging findings showed no neurological disorders after 2.5 years of follow-up.
The investigators have concluded that the neuroimaging tests make it possible to identify patients with REM sleep disturbances who are at high risk of early development of a neurodegenerative disorder such as Parkinson's disease. This will help improve our knowledge of the progression of these diseases, test drugs that might modify their course and initiate early therapy, once the clinical diagnosis is established.
INFORMATION:
For further information:
Hospital Clínic of Barcelona
Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS)
Marc de Semir, Communication Director (mdesemir@clinic.ub.es)
Àlex Argemí, Scientific Editor (aargemi@clinic.ub.es)
Phone: + 34 93 227 57 00
www.idibaps.org
www.blog.hospitalclinic.org
Neuroimaging identifies patients with REM sleep disturbances who will suffer Parkinson's disease
This will make it possible to develop early neuroprotective treatment strategies before Parkinson's disease appears
2010-09-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New treatment for rabies advances after successful phase 1 trial in India
2010-09-15
BOSTON, Mass.—With the potential to save tens of thousands of lives each year, a new cost-effective rabies therapy developed by MassBiologics at the University of Massachusetts and the Serum Institute of India took an important step forward with positive results from a Phase 1 study. The recently completed study showed that a new monoclonal antibody (RAB-1) resulted in protective antibody levels in the serum of treated subjects equal to the current standard of treatment, which is often not available in the areas of the world hit hardest by rabies.
Details of the study ...
JAMA commentary calls for incorporating economic reality into medical education
2010-09-15
Medical students and residents should receive much more thorough and realistic instruction about the economic forces affecting health care and their own clinical decisions so that they can better serve patients' well-being and the nation's economic welfare, says a commentary published today in a theme issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), which focuses on improving medical education.
The commentary is written by Samuel Y. Sessions, MD, JD, a Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute (LA BioMed) investigator, and Allan S. Detsky, MD, PhD, Departments ...
No support for routine prostate screening, but one-off test at 60 may be beneficial
2010-09-15
Existing evidence from randomised controlled trials does not support routine population screening for prostate cancer, concludes a study published on bmj.com today.
However, a second study also published today suggests that a single test at age 60 could identify men who are most likely to develop and die from prostate cancer. These men could then be monitored more closely, while others could be exempt from further screening.
Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers among men worldwide. Screening is widely used in many countries, but it remains controversial ...
Benefits of healthy lifestyle factors stronger in combination
2010-09-15
It is widely known that a healthy lifestyle that includes not smoking, limiting alcohol intake, and maintaining a proper weight reduces disease risk.
In the journal PLoS Medicine, Wei Zheng, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., and colleagues at Vanderbilt University Medical Center now report results from a large study quantifying the impact of combining healthy lifestyle factors.
They found that a healthy lifestyle pattern – being normal weight, having low belly fat, participating in regular physical activity, limiting exposure to secondhand cigarette smoke, and consuming higher ...
New study finds positive return on investment for states that invest in quit smoking treatments
2010-09-15
Washington, DC, (September 14, 2010) — A new study released today by the American Lung Association, and conducted by researchers at Penn State University, finds that helping smokers quit not only saves lives but also offers favorable economic benefits to states. The study, titled Smoking Cessation: the Economic Benefits, provides a nationwide cost-benefit analysis that compares the costs to society of smoking with the economic benefits of states providing cessation (quit-smoking) coverage. The study comes at an important time, as important cessation benefit provisions ...
Outsmarting killer bacteria
2010-09-15
Antibiotics can work miracles, knocking out common infections like bronchitis and tonsillitis. But according to the Center for Disease Control, each year 90,000 people in the U.S. die of drug-resistant "superbugs" ― bacteria like Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a deadly form of staph infection resistant to normal antibiotics. Although hospital patients are particularly susceptible as a result of open wounds and weakened immune systems, the bacteria can infect anyone.
Dr. Micha Fridman of Tel Aviv University's Department of Chemistry is now developing the next generation ...
Last strongholds for tigers identified in new study
2010-09-15
NEW YORK (Embargoed until September 14, 2010: 5:00 p.m. U.S. Eastern Time)— A new peer-reviewed paper by the Wildlife Conservation Society and other groups reveals an ominous finding: most of the world's last remaining tigers—long decimated by overhunting, logging, and wildlife trade—are now clustered in just six percent of their available habitat. The paper identifies 42 'source sites' scattered across Asia that are now the last hope and greatest priority for the conservation and recovery of the world's largest cat.
The securing of the tiger's remaining source sites ...
False memories of self-performance result from watching others' actions
2010-09-15
Did I turn off the stove, or did I just imagine it? Memory isn't always reliable. Psychological scientists have discovered all sorts of ways that false memories get created, and now there's another one for the list: watching someone else do an action can make you think you did it yourself.
The team of psychological scientists who found the new way to create false memories weren't setting out to make a big discovery. They were trying to learn more about imagination, another way that false memories get created. But then in an experiment, they found that people who had watched ...
Stunning NASA infrared imagery of Hurricane Igor reveals a 170 degree temperature difference
2010-09-15
NASA satellites provide infrared images to forecasters that show temperature, and today's imagery of powerful Hurricane Igor showed the storm's perfect form and the warm ocean waters around it that are keeping it fueled. NASA's infrared data also revealed a huge difference of 170 degrees between the cold cloud tops in Hurricane Igor and the warm sea surface temperatures powering it below.
When NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Igor on Sept. 14 at 14:47 UTC (10:47 a.m. EDT) the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument captured icy cold cloud top temperatures in ...
Do children understand irony?
2010-09-15
New research findings from the Université de Montréal reveals that children as young as four are able to understand and use irony. This study, published recently in the British Journal of Developmental Psychology, may impact the way parents communicate with their family.
"Previous studies concluded that irony wasn't understood before the age of eight or ten," says Stephanie Alexander, a postdoctoral student at the Université de Montréal's Department of Social and Preventive Medicine and senior author of the study. "However, these studies were mostly done in a laboratory ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
NASA’s Webb telescope finds bizarre atmosphere on a lemon-shaped exoplanet
The gut bacteria that put the brakes on weight gain in mice
Exploring how patients feel about AI transcription
Category ‘6’ tropical cyclone hot spots are growing
Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds
SLU research shows surge in alcohol-related liver disease driving ‘deaths of despair’
Rising heat reshapes how microbes break down microplastics, new review finds
Roots reveal a hidden carbon pathway in maize plants
Membrane magic: FAMU-FSU researchers repurpose fuel cells membranes for new applications
UN Member States pledge to increase access to diagnosis and inhaled medicines for the 480 million people living with COPD
Combination therapy shows potential to treat pediatric brain cancer ATRT
Study links seabird nesting to shark turf wars in Hawai‘i
Legal sports betting linked to sharp increases in violent crime, study finds
Breakthrough AI from NYUAD speeds up discovery of life-supporting microbes
New Eva Mayr-Stihl Foundation funding initiative boosts research at University of Freiburg on adaptation of forests to global change
The perfect plastic? Plant-based, fully saltwater degradable, zero microplastics
Bias in data may be blocking AI’s potential to combat antibiotic resistance
Article-level metrics would provide more recognition to most researchers than journal-level metrics
Satiety’s little helper: Protein that supports appetite regulating protein identified
UF dives deep into predicting storm damage with computer models
A stormy ocean voyage yields insights on the global carbon cycle
Scientists identify first non-coding gene that controls cell size
Demonstration of altermagnetism in RuO₂ thin films -- A new magnetic material for the AI era
Penn researchers awarded $25M to conduct trial using smartphones to fight heart disease
PCORI awards funding for new patient-centered healthcare research
Exploring the origins of the universe: 145 low-noise amplifiers complete ALMA telescopes
Empress cicada wings help illuminate molecular structure
Using sound waves to detect helium
Time burden in patients with metastatic breast and ovarian cancer from clinic and home demands
Researchers discover bias in AI models that analyze pathology samples
[Press-News.org] Neuroimaging identifies patients with REM sleep disturbances who will suffer Parkinson's diseaseThis will make it possible to develop early neuroprotective treatment strategies before Parkinson's disease appears

