The older people become, the greater risk they have of sharing the tragic  fate of those who remain alive yet are increasingly unaware of the world around  them. In industrialised countries, one to six percent of the population over the  age of 65 and an even more alarming ten to twenty percent over the age of 80  suffer a progressive loss of their cognitive abilities. Alzheimer disease is  the most common cause, affecting 50 to 60 percent of all cases, followed by  circulatory disorders in small blood vessels, capillaries and venules  (calcifications), which make up about 20 percent. These disorders cause ever  larger parts of the brain to become necrotic due to an insufficient supply of  blood.
The earlier these disorders and their causes are detected, the more effective  the therapies can be for preventing the disease or at least substantially  slowing down its progress. Increasingly higher-resolution imaging techniques  making major contributions to early detection are now being presented at the  European Congress of Radiology (ECR 2007), held in Vienna from March 9 to 13,  2007, and attended by some 16,000 participants from 92 countries. University  Professor Dr. Daniela Prayer from the Clinical Department for Neuroradiology at  the Vienna University of Medicine states, “Although we cannot yet depict  individual cells, we can image ultra-tiny bundles of fibre with high resolution.  That is a spectacular breakthrough!”
Voxel-based morphometry allows for the volume of grey matter and white matter  in the brain to be determined to the nearest cubic millimetre.
A reduction in  brain mass (atrophy) in certain areas indicates Alzheimer’s disease and in other  areas, other forms of dementia, according to Professor Prayer. An MR study by  Professor Dr. Riccardo della Nave and his colleagues at the University of  Florence, for instance, found that certain degenerative phenomena occurring in  the left thalamus and in a zone in the left cerebral cortex are the first signs  of family-related Alzheimer’s disease. “These findings are quite valuable. They  enable us not only to differentiate precisely but also to detect the patterns of  the disease before symptoms even occur and to check the efficacy of new drugs,  namely, whether they can really stop the loss of brain mass.”
Another advance allows insights into the circuitry architecture of individual  bundles of cerebral fibre. It is based on special techniques applicable with  modern magnetic resonance devices to render visible the movements of water  molecules in the space between fibres. Professor Prayer explains, “Wherever  protons change direction, there has to be an obstacle, a cell wall or a fibre  connection. Applying the reverse conclusion, we obtain a picture of these  structures and see early on where swelling occurs or cells die off.”
No less fascinating are the prospects opened up by magnetic resonance  spectroscopy (MRS). It allows a non-contact x-ray view of biochemical processes  within the regions of the brain under examination.
All in all, Professor Prayer notes, “the new methodological advances of  magnetic resonance technology provide us with a hopeful view of the future in  terms of the early diagnosis and efficacy testing of therapies for dementias. If  this happens in the near future, the spectre of old-age dementia will lose much  of its threatening effect.”
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14 years ago

 
 
2 comments:
This post is really true about the importance of early detection of Alzheimer’s disease and how it can change the life of the patient and the family. Although there is no cure for Alzheimer’s disease, early detection is a very key element to successfully fight the disease.
Alzheimer’s clinic Toronto
يتميز افضل سباك صحي في الكويت بحميع خدمات السباكة تركيب وتوريد ادوات صحيه الكويت مضخات المياه مع فني صحي بالكويت سخانات مركزية سباك صحي الكويت تسليك مجاري
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