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

Pulse pressure elevation could presage cerebrovascular disease in Alzheimer's patients

2012-04-10
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of California, San Diego and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System have shown that elevated pulse pressure may increase the risk of cerebrovascular disease (CVD) in older adults with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Their study has been published in the early online edition of Journal of Alzheimer's Disease in advance of the June 5 print publication.

The findings may have treatment implications, since some antihypertensive medications specifically address the pulsatile component of blood pressure. Pulse pressure (PP) – the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure – is one measure of the pulsatile component of blood pressure. PP increases substantially with age, partially due to hardening of the arteries.

Hypertension is a common risk factor for AD, but the use of antihypertensive medications to prevent dementia has had mixed results. Most studies examining the effects of blood pressure on the risk of AD have focused on standard measures of blood pressure, the systole and diastole readings. However, scientists theorized that PP elevation may impair the clearance of beta amyloid – a hallmark of AD – from the brain. Other studies have suggested that PP elevation may contribute to AD risk indirectly by increasing the risk of CVD.

The researchers, led by Mark W. Bondi, PhD, of VA San Diego Healthcare System and UC San Diego Department of Psychiatry, looked at 65 patients who later met the criteria for AD at autopsy. These patients were examined before death for relationships among blood pressure and neuropathologic markers. More than half of them were found, at autopsy, to have CVD.

"The association between PP and CVD was independent of dementia severity and the presence of other vascular risk factors," said Bondi. "Interestingly, standard measures of blood pressure were not significantly associated with the presence of CVD."

The study suggests several conclusions: that elevated blood pressure in older adults with AD is related to CVD but not AD pathology; that CVD may be more closely associated with PP than systolic or diastolic pressure; and that, in AD patients, PP elevation may be influencing cognition through effects on CVD.

The study's first author, Daniel A. Nation, PhD, of the VA San Diego Healthcare System, concluded the findings offer possible treatment implications. "Antihypertensive treatments targeting the pulsatile component of blood pressure may reduce the vascular contribution to cognitive impairment in AD patients or in individuals at risk of AD."

###

Additional contributors include Lisa Delano-Wood, PhD, Christina E. Wierenga, PhD and Amy J. Jak, PhD, VA San Diego and UC San Diego Department of Psychiatry; Katherine J. Bangen, PhD, UC San Diego Department of Psychiatry; Lawrence A. Hansen, MD, UC San Diego Departments of Neurosciences and Pathology; Douglas R. Galasko, MD, VA San Diego and UC San Diego Department of Neurosciences; and David P. Salmon, PhD, UC San Diego Department of Neurosciences.

The study was supported by the Alzheimer's Association and the National Institute of Health.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Predictors identified for rehospitalization among post-acute stroke patients

2012-04-10
GALVESTON, April 6, 2012 – Stroke patients receiving in-patient rehabilitation are more likely to land back in the hospital within three months if they are functioning poorly, show signs of depression and lack social support according to researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) at Galveston. Hospital readmission for older adults within 30 days of discharge costs Medicare roughly $18 billion annually. Among the first of such research to explore the risk of re-hospitalization among this patient segment, the study is available online at The Journals ...

Invasive heart test being dramatically overused, Stanford study shows

2012-04-10
STANFORD, Calif. — An invasive heart test used routinely to measure heart function is being dramatically overused, especially among patients who recently underwent similar, more effective tests, according to a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine. "This adds both risk to the patient and significant extra cost," said first author of the study Ronald Witteles, MD, assistant professor of cardiovascular medicine and program director of Stanford's internal medicine residency training program, who called the rates of unnecessary use "shockingly high." The ...

Is some homophobia self-phobia?

2012-04-10
VIDEO: Richard Ryan, professor of clinical and social psychology at the University of Rochester, discusses research on the psychological roots of homophobia. A new study shows that individuals who reported themselves... Click here for more information. Homophobia is more pronounced in individuals with an unacknowledged attraction to the same sex and who grew up with authoritarian parents who forbade such desires, a series of psychology studies demonstrates. The study is ...

Experts identify critical genes mutated in stomach cancer

2012-04-10
SINGAPORE, April 8, 2012 – An international team of scientists, led by researchers from the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School (Duke-NUS) in Singapore and National Cancer Centre of Singapore, has identified hundreds of novel genes that are mutated in stomach cancer, the second-most lethal cancer worldwide. The study, which appears online on April 8, 2012 in Nature Genetics, paves the way for treatments tailored to the genetic make-up of individual stomach tumors. Stomach cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death globally with more than 700,000 deaths each year, ...

Genes identified for common childhood obesity

2012-04-10
Genetics researchers have identified at least two new gene variants that increase the risk of common childhood obesity. "This is the largest-ever genome-wide study of common childhood obesity, in contrast to previous studies that have focused on more extreme forms of obesity primarily connected with rare disease syndromes," said lead investigator Struan F.A. Grant, Ph.D., associate director of the Center for Applied Genomics at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "As a consequence, we have definitively identified and characterized a genetic predisposition to common ...

New 'genetic bar code' technique establishes ability to derive DNA information from RNA

2012-04-10
Researchers from Mount Sinai School of Medicine have developed a method to derive enough DNA information from non-DNA sources—such as RNA—to clearly identify individuals whose biological data are stored in massive research repositories. The approach may raise questions regarding the ability to protect individual identity when high-dimensional data are collected for research purposes. A paper introducing the technique appears in the April 8 online edition of Nature Genetics. DNA contains the genetic instructions used in the development and functioning of every living cell. ...

Trinity researchers report major eye disease breakthrough

2012-04-10
Scientists at Trinity College Dublin have discovered that a part of the immune system called the inflammasome is involved in regulating the development of one of the most common forms of blindness, called Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). They have discovered that controlling an inflammatory component IL-18, in cases of Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD) could prevent the development of the disease. The disease AMD involves loss of central vision, people with advanced disease being unable to read, watch TV, enjoy the cinema, drive, or use a computer − ...

Sugar production switch in liver may offer target for new diabetes therapies

Sugar production switch in liver may offer target for new diabetes therapies
2012-04-10
VIDEO: In their extraordinary quest to decode human metabolism, researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have discovered a pair of molecules that regulates the liver's production of glucose --... Click here for more information. In their extraordinary quest to decode human metabolism, researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have discovered a pair of molecules that regulates the liver's production of glucose---- the simple sugar that is the ...

Maternal obesity, diabetes associated with autism, other developmental disorders

2012-04-10
A major study of the relationships between maternal metabolic conditions and the risk that a child will be born with a neurodevelopmental disorder has found strong links between maternal diabetes and obesity and the likelihood of having a child with autism or another developmental disability. Conducted by researchers affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute, the study found that mothers who were obese were 1-2/3 times more likely to have a child with autism as normal-weight mothers without diabetes or hypertension, and were more than twice as likely to have a child ...

On the move

On the move
2012-04-10
KANSAS CITY, MO—Cells on the move reach forward with lamellipodia and filopodia, cytoplasmic sheets and rods supported by branched networks or tight bundles of actin filaments. Cells without functional lamellipodia are still highly motile but lose their ability to stay on track, report researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in the April 9, 2012, online issue of the Journal of Cell Biology. Their study provides new insight into cell motility, a complex and integrated process, which, when gone awry, can lead to various disease conditions such as cancer ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New stem cell medium creates contracting canine heart muscle cells

Deep learning-assisted organogel pressure sensor for alphabet recognition and bio-mechanical motion monitoring

Efficient neutral nitrate-to-ammonia electrosynthesis using synergistic Ru-based nanoalloys on nitrogen-doped carbon

Low-temperature electrolytes for lithium-ion batteries: Current challenges, development, and perspectives

Two-dimensional MXene-based advanced sensors for neuromorphic computing intelligent application

UC Davis launches major study on language development in children with Down syndrome

Cute little marsupials pack a punch at mealtimes

Football draft season raises concerns for young player welfare

High prevalence of artificial skin lightening in under 5s, Nigerian survey suggests

Scientists discover new type of lion roar, which could help protect the iconic big cats

ChatGPT is smart, but no match for the most creative humans

Mystery of how turtles read their magnetic map solved: they feel the magnetism

From smartphone stethoscopes to voice-detected heart failure,  innovations take centre stage at ESC Digital & AI Summit   

How and when could AI be used in emergency medicine?

Report yields roadmap for Americans to age with health, wealth, and social equity

Pain research reveals new detail of how synapses strengthen

Hidden process behind 2025 Santorini earthquakes uncovered

Giant impactor Theia formed in the inner Solar System

Rebalancing lung repair with immune damage is key to surviving severe influenza

2025 Santorini seismic unrest triggered by “pumping” magma flow

Toxic gut bacteria may drive ulcerative colitis by killing protective immune cells

Rethinking where language comes from

Subverting plasmids to combat antibiotic resistance

Theia and Earth were neighbors

Calcium “waves” shape flies’ eyes

Scientists uncover new on-switch for pain signaling pathway that could lead to safer treatment and relief

Modeling of electrostatic and contact interaction between low-velocity lunar dust and spacecraft

Building a sustainable metals infrastructure: NIST report highlights key strategies

Discovering America’s ‘epilepsy belt’: First-of-its-kind national study reveals US regions with high epilepsy rates among older adults

Texting helps UCSF reach more patients with needed care

[Press-News.org] Pulse pressure elevation could presage cerebrovascular disease in Alzheimer's patients