91探花

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Alzheimer鈥檚 disease increasingly clarified

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There is growing awareness and recognition of Alzheimer鈥檚 as a disease, rather than a part of normal aging. So thinks Professor Kaj Blennow of the University 91探花, a leading researcher in the field. 鈥淎lzheimer鈥檚 Day is one way of building further on this," he says.

World Alzheimer's Day falls on September 21 annually. In various ways, attention is focused on the disease in Sweden and abroad, throughout the month. Alzheimer鈥檚 is our most common form of dementia, and the number of sufferers is rising.

Typical symptoms of Alzheimer's disease involve impacts on recent memory, language, thinking, concentration, and perception of time. Anxiety and depressive symptoms are also common, which also affect other people in the patient鈥檚 vicinity. Dementia is sometimes described as a 鈥渇amily illness.鈥

Dementia diseases are caused by parts of the brain being affected and impaired. The problems that arise depend on which part of the brain has suffered these effects. In Alzheimer鈥檚, nerve cells in the memory center of the brain deteriorate at an early stage of the disease.

Tests in primary care

In Alzheimer鈥檚, the protein beta-amyloid forms harmful clumps (鈥渁myloid plaques鈥) in the brain. In addition, another protein, tau, changes and forms small, interlacing threads called tangles inside the nerve cells, which also contributes to the degeneration of these cells. Measuring these changes by means of biomarkers is a strong area of 鈥嬧赌research at the University 91探花.

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Kaj Blennow
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Kaj Blennow, Professor of Neurochemistry at the Faculty of Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, and Chief Physician at Sahlgrenska University Hospital, comments.

鈥淭he most exciting thing we鈥檝e worked on is developing methods for measuring phospho-tau, the protein found in tangles in Alzheimer鈥檚. These tests work very well and can show, with great reliability, whether a patient has tangles and thus Alzheimer's. The idea is that they could serve as screening tests earlier on 鈥 in primary care, for example.鈥

By screening he means not extensive testing of asymptomatic groups, but testing of people who seek medical care because they have problems with, for example, their memory and speech ability.

鈥淭here, the tests could be used to see which patients can be referred to specialist clinics for more detailed investigation, and hopefully soon for treatment as well,鈥 Blennow says.

Future medication

Development of drugs to treat Alzheimer鈥檚 has brought both hopes and disappointments. This applies to the drug aducanumab, a monoclonal antibody, that was rapidly approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in summer 2021 and is now being evaluated by the equivalent EU organization, the European Medicines Agency (EMA).

The clinical benefit of aducanumab 鈥 that is, whether it alleviates the symptoms 鈥 has not yet been established, but it does reduce formation of amyloid plaques, one of the underlying processes of the disease.

鈥淭he quantity of plaques decreases significantly, and aducanumab is therefore termed 鈥榙isease-modifying.鈥 This is a huge step forward, and there are several similar immunotherapies against amyloid that are in the final phase of testing and have already shown similar, very promising effects,鈥 Blennow concludes.