09/06/2006
Research performed at the University of Navarra concludes that some patients with mild cognitive impairment suffer from AlzheimerThe research study performed by Lluís Samaranch provides corroboration for the feasibility of detecting this disease in its early stages
Research performed at the University of Navarra has concluded that some
patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) will develop Alzheimer’s
disease in the future. The study, focused on the detection of early
symptoms of the disease, was based on a multidisciplinary analysis
using data extracted from a sample of 300 individuals at the University
Hospital.
This doctoral research, performed by Lluís Samaranch, a scientist of
the Center for Applied Medical Research (CIMA), supports the theory
that a majority of patients with MCI are passing through an
intermediate phase which will eventually result in an acute disease
state. “Nevertheless,” noted the new doctor of the School of Sciences,
“not all cases of patients with mild impairment will later develop into
Alzheimer’s.”
In order to come to this conclusion, the team
from the Memory Disorders Unit of the University Hospital searched for
early indicators of the disease: “In addition to the neuropsychological
and neuroimagery markers implicated, our most important achievement is
the discovery of the PET—positron emission tomography—as a highly
effective technique for measuring the risk of progression of MCI,”
highlighted Dr. Pablo Martínez-Lage, director of the dissertation.
Early detection in order to combat the disease
Under the title “Alzheimer’s disease in its prodomic phase. Transverse
study and identification of markers of progression of dementia in a
prospective series of patients with mild cognitive impairment,” this
multidisciplinary research project involved the collaboration of
neuropsychologists, nurses and engineers.
Over more than 17
months, a sample of 299 individuals were studied. Among these, 103 were
suffering from MCI; 80 reported subjective memory complaints; 62
suffered from Alzheimer’s; and 54 belonged to the control group, which
was made up of volunteers of the Navarra Blood Donors Association.
All participants were required to undergo neuropsychological tests,
magnetic resonance imaging, various types of analyses, and an
examination of genetic markers of risk, among other procedures. Thanks
to this, the team concluded that the disease could be identified in
early phases prior to causing irreversible damage, “although these
require costly techniques, such as PET scans,” noted Lluís Samaranch.
Therefore, they insisted on the necessary to find new biochemical
markers that are cheaper and easier to identify, which nevertheless
have the same predictive capacity: “In this way we would be able to
make therapeutic interventions in the early stages of Alzheimer’s
disease, when there still exist viable possibilities of success,”
affirmed Dr. Martínez-Lage.
School of Sciences CUN