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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: brain + scans + cognitive  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 268 for brain scans cognitive. (0.41 seconds) 
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Exercise Helps Prevent Age-Related Brain Changes in Older Adults
MarketWatch -
The study, conducted at the University of North Carolina (UNC) - Chapel Hill, is the first to compare brain scans of older adults who exercise to brain ...

AFP
Brain scans show root of memory glitch with aging
The Associated Press - Nov 26, 2008
NEW YORK (AP) ? Brain scans of older people in a noisy lab machine give biological backing to the idea that distraction hampers memory with aging, ...
With Age, Distractions Hinder Memory RedOrbit
Senior Citizens Need to Avoid Distractions to Improve Memory SeniorJournal.com
all 129 news articles »

PsychCentral.com
Brain Scans Demonstrate Link Between Education And Alzheimer's
Science Daily (press release) - Nov 10, 2008
In addition to scanning the participants' brains with PIB, the participants took several tests that assessed their cognitive abilities and status. ...
Education blunts effects of Alzheimer's: study Reuters
Education may protect against Alzheimer's United Press International
Cognitive Abilities Strong Among Highly Educated Alzheimer's Test ... Inventorspot
Washington Post - Hindu
all 100 news articles »
Study on aging going strong 50 years later
Wilton Villager, CT -
In recent years, investigators have drawn blood samples and administered brain scans to add neurological evidence to the database, some of which might one ...

Scientific American
Fitness and the Brain: Can a Walk a Day Keep Alzheimer's Away?
Scientific American - Nov 25, 2008
The availability of newer brain scans will also help us directly track whether exercise can affect the progression of Alzheimer brain pathology in people at ...
Fibromyalgia Patients Have Altered Cerebral Blood Flow to the Brain
American Chronicle, CA - Nov 30, 2008
Nuclear medicine utilizes SPECT (Single Photon Emission Computerized Tomography) technology to perform brain scans. This records brain functioning by ...
Fishy Diet Could Limit Brain Lesions
Tampa Tribune, FL - Nov 28, 2008
Small brain lesions, detectable only on scans, have been linked to the loss of thinking skills and dementia. Some research shows that eating fish, ...
IBM aims to replicate the brain with cognitive computing project
VentureBeat, CA - Nov 19, 2008
That?sa scan of his own brain pictured above. ?The question is, ?What is mind?? We have no definition of it. Cognitive computing is our attempt to engineer ...

Canada.com
CHRISTMAS CHEER
Canada.com, Canada - Nov 28, 2008
Instead, it's a quantifiable state that shows up in brain scans. "The brain of a happy, in-the-spirit person" shows activity in the reward centre's amygdala ...
How to Deploy the Amazing Power of the Teen Brain
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Nov 26, 2008
The maturation lag between emotional and cognitive brain centers may help explain why teenagers get so easily upset when parents see no reason, for example; ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 230,000 + brain + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Ohio Salutes Veterans with GI-Bill Benefits
ePluribus Media - Jul 9, 2008
... and what he has charged his Chancellor of Education, Eric Fingerhut, to do is to increase higher education enrollment by 230000 in the next two years. ...
Businessnetwire.us: Stocks in the News: AMZO, SDVI, PRAN, ASVP
Manufacturing Business Technology, IL - Jul 17, 2008
The site already has more than 106 million members with approximately 230000 more joining each day. This advertisement is expected to reach 1.6 million ...PRAN - PINK:AMZO - PINK:SDVI
Source: Google News

What's in a (Drug) Name? Plenty! -
M Mitka - JAMA, 1999 - Am Med Assoc
... than 2% of the more than 230000 submittershavetestedtheirsystemswith Medicare ... of
such devices on their Web site: http ... the decade of the brain,? Nobel laureate ...

New Technique Treats Male Infertility -
M Fitzpatrick - JAMA, 1999 - Am Med Assoc
... than 2% of the more than 230000 submittershavetestedtheirsystemswith Medicare ... of
such devices on their Web site: http ... the decade of the brain,? Nobel laureate ...

RU Ready 4 Y2K?
C Marwick - JAMA, 1999 - Am Med Assoc
... than 2% of the more than 230000 submittershavetestedtheirsystemswith Medicare ... of
such devices on their Web site: http ... the decade of the brain,? Nobel laureate ...

1999 Albert Lasker Medical Research Awards Presented -
MF Goldsmith - JAMA, 1999 - Am Med Assoc
... than 2% of the more than 230000 submittershavetestedtheirsystemswith Medicare ... of
such devices on their Web site: http ... the decade of the brain,? Nobel laureate ...

Chick embryonic pigmented retina is one of the group of epithelioid tissues that lack cytokeratins … -
RJ Docherty - Journal of Cell Science, 1984 - jcs.biologists.org
... grow from cultures of neural retina (or brain), and are ... plaque components of M r
205000 and 230000 (Fig. ... attributable to microfilaments of the terminal web (Fig ...

[PDF] Epilepsy in Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Far North Queensland -
J Archer, R Bunby - Med J Aust, 2006 - mja.com.au
... Of the population of 230000, of whom 135000 live in Cairns and its ... Brain 1992;
115(Pt 3): 771-782. ... Available at: http:// www.ama.com.au/web.nsf/doc/WEEN- 5GJ3DY ...
-

[PDF] Extensible Terascale Facility (ETF): Indiana-Purdue Grid (IP-Grid) -
M McRobbie, G Fox, D Gannon, MJ Palakal, C Stewart - 2006 - scholarworks.iu.edu
... extraction of semantic information from text and links in Web pages and ... reservoir
simulations ? groundwater cleanup ? NanoHUB ? Identifying brain disorders ...
-

[PDF] EMBLA 2002 -
A Optical, G Survey - hessdalen.org
... 70000 90000 110000 130000 150000 170000 190000 210000 230000 8000 9000 10000 11000
12000 13000 14000 15000 16000 DISTANCE (meters) ABSOLUTE LUMINOSITY (Wattts) ...

Characterization of Pasteurized Fluid Milk Shelf-life Attributes -
HI Fromm, KJ Boor - Journal of Food Science, 2004 - Blackwell Synergy
... OF FOOD SCIENCE M207 Published on Web 9/29 ... colonies were streaked to isolation on
brain heart infusion ... with numbers typically ranging between 230000 and 283000 ...

[CITATION] FILES/TABLES: CP HTD IAF IRD PSTU SDCF
MORI CRITICAL
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Brain scans may predict cognitive decline in normal people

A study led by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley has found that brain scans may detect neurological changes in people who exhibit no outward signs of cognitive decline but who later develop dementia or mental impairment.

The study, published in the journal Annals of Neurology, provides encouraging evidence that positron emission tomography ( PET ) and magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI ) could eventually be used to detect preclinical signs of Alzheimer's disease.

" Our paper is one of the few to show that it is possible to detect changes in the brains of normal older people who experience subsequent cognitive decline," said William Jagust, UC Berkeley and lead author of the paper. " We don't have enough data, yet, to say that the brain scans can predict Alzheimer's disease. However, the locations of the affected brain regions have been associated in other studies with Alzheimer's, so it's possible that we are picking up early signs of the disease."

Jagust, who has joint appointments at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health, the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, worked with Mary Haan, professor of epidemiology at the University of Michigan and principal investigator of the (SALSA). The brain imaging study is a substudy of SALSA ( Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging ), the first and only representative study of dementia and cognitive functioning in a Latino population. SALSA, funded by the National Institute on Aging, includes 1,789 people, primarily Mexican American, who were recruited by mail, telephone and door-to-door solicitation.

For the imaging substudy, 60 cognitively normal participants received baseline PET and MRI brain scans and underwent a full battery of neuropsychological tests at enrollment. They were followed for an average of 3.8 years, taking cognition and memory tests approximately once a year. Individuals with significant declines in their scores were evaluated further for signs of cognitive decline.

The researchers found that lower glucose metabolism - as determined by the PET scans - was strongly linked to faster declines on the modified mini mental state examination ( 3MSE ), a test that assesses global cognitive functions such as memory, language, spatial ability and judgment.

Specifically, the PET scans detected areas of lower glucose metabolism in the parietal and temporal lobes of the brain, the same regions shown in many other studies to have lower glucose metabolism in Alzheimer's patients and in some people with mild cognitive impairment.

In the imaging substudy, the MRI scans focused on the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus regions in the temporal lobe of the brain, areas that are involved in memory. Other post-mortem studies of the brains of Alzheimer's patients indicate that these regions are the first to become affected as the disease develops.

The researchers found that the smaller these brain regions were in the MRI scans, the more an individual's score declined on the delayed recall ( DelRec ) memory test. These results are also in line with findings from other studies that link the size of the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus in people with mild cognitive impairment with the eventual development of Alzheimer's disease.

The researchers point out that the different brain scans predicted declines on different types of cognitive tests. The PET scans predicted declines on the 3MSE, but they did not predict declines on the DelRec memory test. It was the reverse for the MRI scans, which predicted declines on the memory test, but not on the 3MSE.

" These results fit with what we know about the brain," said Jagust. " The brain regions picked up by the PET scans involve more generalized cognitive functions, while the regions studied in the MRI scans are associated with memory."

During the study, five people developed cognitive impairment and one person was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. One of the five who developed cognitive impairment showed the fastest decline on both tests.

" In a project of this size, it's not realistic to expect the brain scans to predict Alzheimer's," said Haan. " But there is enough information to say that PET and MRI scans can predict subsequent cognitive decline in a population of cognitively normal people."

The researchers note that prior research on Alzheimer's focused primarily on people who had already developed mild symptoms of cognitive loss or on post-mortem analyses of the brains of Alzheimer's patients.

" By the time people who are already sick are identified, it's often too late to slow down the progression of Alzheimer's," said Haan. " By identifying early changes that could predict the development of dementia, it may also be possible to link those changes to primary risk factors that could be altered."

According to the National Institutes of Health, approximately 4 million people suffer from Alzheimer's disease in the United States, and the proportion of people with the disease doubles every five years after the age of 65.

" In the last two to five years, there has been a real explosion of knowledge about the molecular basis of Alzheimer's that may lead to effective drugs to cure or prevent the disease, and those drugs would likely be more effective the earlier they are given," said Jagust. "That has given a new urgency to research in predicting as early as possible those who will go on to develop Alzheimer's."

Options are now limited for identifying those who may go on to develop Alzheimer's disease. Few genetic factors have been identified, and the ones that have are only applicable to a minority of people who go on to develop the disease.

For instance, research has identified an allele that codes for a protein called apolipoprotein E, or apoE, as a major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. ApoE is associated with the buildup of beta amyloid plaques in the brain's nerve cells.

However, researchers estimate that this gene is only present in 15 to 25 percent of populations with Northern European ancestry. Among the Mexican American and Asian American populations, the prevalence is closer to 10 percent.

Meanwhile, research is continuing on identifying other risk factors for mental decline. The SALSA study, for instance, is credited with first identifying type 2 diabetes as a risk factor for dementia and cognitive impairment.

" It's possible that people of Mexican descent have a higher genetic risk for type 2 diabetes," said Haan. She said that she is investigating whether genes known to be associated with type 2 diabetes are also related to an increased risk in cognitive impairment.

Source: University of California – Berkeley, 2006

 
 
 
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