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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: fingerprint + alzheimer + protein  Related to the article below (Last Update: 11/30/2008)

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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: alzheimers + alzheimer's + spot  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)


Canada.com
'Biomarkers' May Help Spot, Track Alzheimer's
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Jul 29, 2008
By Amanda Gardner TUESDAY, July 29 (HealthDay News) -- Scientists may be succeeding in the hunt for biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease. ...
MRIs show promise for early Alzheimer's diagnosis Reuters
MRI could be key in Alzheimer's fight USA Today
Conventional MRI And Computer Analysis Could Be Used To Detect ... Medical News Today
TopNews - InjuryBoard.com
all 105 news articles »
Elan shares slump on Phase II data on Alzheimer's drug
Irish Independent, Ireland - Jul 30, 2008
half of all Alzheimer's patients. Bapineuzumab, which had been tagged as the new Lipitor, is the first treatment shown to help patients by removing clumps ...
The know-all patients who give GPs a headache
Times Online, UK - Aug 1, 2008
But maybe not as interesting as the revelation that, if you think you have Alzheimer's, you probably don't. Whereas if you're adamant you don't, ...
Custom PC folding team takes number 7 spot
Custom PC, UK -
... team further up the world leaderboard, but you?ll also make a contribution to Stanford?s research into diseases such as Huntington?s and Alzheimer?s. ...
Guest starring is a win-win prospect
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Aug 2, 2008
... Buttons also brilliantly endured bad health on the show, and Alan Alda turned in a stunning performance as a doctor sinking into Alzheimer's disease. ...
New imaging technique may spot Alzheimer's earlier
HealthCentral.com, VA - Jul 11, 2008
In Alzheimer's disease, nerve cell death and tissue loss cause all areas of the brain, especially the hippocampus region, to shrink. ...

ABC News
Underwater Creature Cures
ABC News - Jul 29, 2008
The hope is that medicine for diseases such as Alzheimer's and cancer may be formed from the properties of marine animals. At left, Biochemist Mark Merchant ...
Handicapped man fined $438 for using deceased wife's parking sticker
The Gazette (Montreal), Canada - Jul 14, 2008
She'd had acute arthritis in her knees, a heart condition and Alzheimer's disease, and so the couple had a handicapped parking permit issued in her name. ...

Wall Street Journal Blogs
Merck & Wyeth Swap Spots in Investors? Eyes
Wall Street Journal Blogs, NY - Jul 22, 2008
Most significantly, its share price is being bolstered by investor hopes around an Alzheimers drug, bapineuzumab, the company is developing with Elan. ...
HEALTH HAPPENINGS
Bradenton Herald,  United States - Jul 28, 2008
Barbara Dondero, whose extensive art and teaching experience includes pioneering work in the Alzheimer's and Parkinson's world, will be the speaker at the ...
Source: Google News

The CA1 Region of the Human Hippocampus Is a Hot Spot in Alzheimer's Disease -
MJ WEST, CH KAWAS, LJ MARTIN, JC TRONCOSO - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2000 - Blackwell Synergy
... Free Content. Full Text. The CA1 Region of the Human Hippocampus Is a Hot Spot
in Alzheimer's Disease. MJ WEST a, a Neurobiology, University ...

Protein oxidation in the brain in Alzheimer's disease -
MY Aksenov, MV Aksenova, DA Butterfield, JW Geddes … - Neuroscience, 2001 - Elsevier
... in ?-tubulin, ?-actin and creatine kinase BB in Alzheimer's disease and control
brain extracts. Protein carbonyls were undetectable in spots matching glial ...

… of Ubiquitin Carboxyl-terminal Hydrolase L1 Associated with Idiopathic Parkinson's and Alzheimer's -
J Choi, AI Levey, ST Weintraub, HD Rees, M Gearing … - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2004 - ASBMB
... was established using CERAD (Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's
Disease) criteria ... In PD, the level of spot #1 was decreased by 30%, whereas the ...

Proteomic studies of potential cerebrospinal fluid protein markers for Alzheimer's disease -
M Puchades, SF Hansson, CL Nilsson, N Andreasen, K … - Molecular Brain Research, 2003 - Elsevier
... Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia and affects nearly ... protein
spots from different gels were matched and their spot volumes determined ...

… Cell Cycle-dependent Phosphorylation of tau Protein in Living Cells: Implications for Alzheimer's -
S Illenberger, Q Zheng-Fischhofer, U Preuss, K … - Molecular Biology of the Cell, 1998 - Am Soc Cell Biol
... by phosphorylation-dependent antibodies that have been used to characterize Alzheimer
tau and ... The diffuse spot at the bottom of the interphase pattern labeled ...

Identification of oxidized plasma proteins in Alzheimer's disease -
J Choi, CA Malakowsky, JM Talent, CC Conrad, RW … - Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2002 - Elsevier
... oxygen species is central to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). ... Seven principal
oxidized protein spots (isoelectric POINT=4.7?5.5; molecular MASS=45 ...

Proteomic identification of nitrated proteins in Alzheimer's disease brain -
A Castegna, V Thongboonkerd, JB Klein, B Lynn, WR … - Journal of Neurochemistry, 2003 - Blackwell Synergy
... 80?C. The Rapid Autopsy Program of the University of Kentucky Alzheimer's Disease
Research ... The sample spot was washed with 1 ?L of a 1% TFA solution for ...

Proteomic Profiling and Neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's Disease -
T Tsuji, A Shiozaki, R Kohno, K Yoshizato, S … - Neurochemical Research, 2002 - Springer
... Gray spots represent proteins unchanged in AD brain. Black spots are indicated
as proteins affected in Alzheimer?s disease. Fig. ...

Proteomic identification of oxidatively modified proteins in Alzheimer's disease brain. Part II: … -
A Castegna, M Aksenov, V Thongboonkerd, JB Klein, … - Journal of Neurochemistry, 2002 - Blackwell Synergy
... at -80?C. The Rapid Autopsy Program of the University of Kentucky Alzheimer's Disease
Research ... L of 2% formic acid in 18 MO water was added to each spot. ...

Different distribution of phosphorylated tau protein isoforms in Alzheimer's and Pick's diseases -
N Sergeant, JP David, D Lefranc, P Vermersch, A … - FEBS Letters, 1997 - Elsevier
... PHF) are the main structural components found in degenerating neurons of Alzheimer's
disease (AD). ... 2A). The 74 kDa spot was detected by antibodies Tau-E10, 304 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Protein 'Fingerprint' Could Spot Alzheimer's in Living Patients

December 12, 2006 03:55:45 PM PST

TUESDAY, Dec. 12 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. scientists say they've identified a panel of 23 protein biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid that form a neurochemical "fingerprint" that may someday be used to confirm Alzheimer's disease in living patients.

Currently, doctors rely on their judgment to determine whether a patient has Alzheimer's instead of another form of dementia. In most cases, a true diagnosis can only be confirmed when brain tissue is examined after a patient dies, noted researchers at Cornell University and Weill Cornell Medical College.

"Our study is the first to use sophisticated proteomic methods to hone in on a group of cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers that are specific to autopsy-proven Alzheimer's disease. Those postmortem tests confirmed that the panel is over 90 percent sensitive in identifying people with Alzheimer's disease," Kelvin Lee, a professor of molecular and cell biology and an associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at Cornell, said in a prepared statement.

The researchers compared 2,000 cerebrospinal proteins from 34 patients with autopsy-proven Alzheimer's to those from 34 age-matched people without Alzheimer's disease.

"Just as the human genome reflects the array of genes a person possesses, the 'proteome' is the vast collection of proteins expressed by those genes. Essentially, we used high-tech methods to contrast the proteomes of Alzheimer's patients against those of a control cohort that included people with other forms of dementia as well as healthy individuals, looking for key differences between the two groups," Lee said.

The findings are published in the December online issue of the Annals of Neurology.

"Typically, Alzheimer's disease is not diagnosed until the disease has already caused some amount of dementia. Having a chemical test available may allow patients to be diagnosed earlier in the course of the disease," lead author Erin Finehout said in a prepared statement.

A highly accurate biomarker test for Alzheimer's could help guide patient treatment and may prove valuable in research by helping scientists gauge the impact of treatments for the disease.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more about Alzheimer's disease.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Folic Acid Doesn't Help the Heart

December 12, 2006 03:55:45 PM PST
By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Dec. 12 (HealthDay News) -- If you're taking folic acid supplements to try to stave off a second heart attack or stroke, you'd probably get more benefit from making lifestyle changes, such as exercising more and eating right, new research suggests.

In an analysis of a dozen randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials, researchers found that folic acid supplements do little to reduce cardiovascular disease risk in people who already have a history of heart disease, stroke or serious kidney disease.

"Consuming a supplement of folic acid is probably not going to mitigate your risk of cardiovascular disease," said the study's lead author, Dr. Lydia Bazzano, an assistant professor of epidemiology at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, in New Orleans.

Results of Bazzano's analysis are published in the Dec. 13 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

According to Dr. Stephen Siegel, a cardiologist at New York University Medical Center in New York City: "The whole concept [of folic acid supplementation] began because we know there's an association between homocysteine levels and atherosclerotic disease, and we know that we can safely lower homocysteine with folic acid. But we don't know if there's a cause-and-effect relationship between homocysteine and cardiovascular disease, or simply an association. Many doctors jumped on the bandwagon, however, because folic acid didn't have the potential to do any harm, but it looked like it might help."

"It was a great thought," Siegel said, but added, "Unfortunately, there's no easy magic bullet. This study cements the evidence presented by other studies that there doesn't seem to be any cardiovascular benefit from folic acid supplements."

For the new study, Bazzano and her colleagues reviewed published literature from 1966 through July 2006 to find studies that had been done comparing folic acid to the use of a placebo in people who had a history of cardiovascular disease.

The researchers found 12 studies that fit their criteria. Together, the studies included data from nearly 17,000 people who took either a placebo or a folic acid supplement for at least six months.

When looking at the studies combined, 18.3 percent of those taking folic acid experienced a cardiovascular event, compared to 19.2 percent of those on a placebo. For heart disease, the rates were 11.4 percent for people taking folic acid supplements, and 10.6 percent for those on a placebo. And 4.7 percent of those on folic acid had a stroke, compared to 5.8 percent of patients on a placebo.

One piece of good news from the study is that taking folic acid appeared to be safe, and it didn't increase the risk for mortality.

"This study provides very important info, and it shows that cardiovascular disease prevention is not as simple as taking a pill," said Dr. Julius Gardin, chief of cardiology at St. John Hospital and Medical Center in Detroit. "I don't know that the final answer on folic acid has been written yet, but this study suggests that folic acid supplementation is not effective for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease," he added.

Bazzano was quick to point out, however, that this study doesn't mean people shouldn't get folic acid -- which in its natural form is known as folate -- from a healthful diet. Leafy green vegetables and citrus fruits are rich in folate and are important components in a healthy diet. And, eating a healthy diet is a known way to prevent cardiovascular disease.

Other ways of reducing your risk include quitting smoking, lowering your blood pressure and cholesterol, and controlling diabetes, according to Bazzano.

Both Siegel and Gardin said exercise is very important in protecting your cardiovascular health, as well.

"Exercise is probably one of the most critical things that people can do. At a minimum, people should get 30 minutes of activity at least five days a week," said Siegel, who added that most people should also add 40 minutes to an hour of moderately strenuous activity into their routines another two or three times a week.

More information

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration offers advice on keeping your heart healthy.

 
 
 
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