Wash U Researchers Find Blood Test Can Detect Early Alzheimer's Symptoms
For years, doctors have used an expensive brain scan to detect symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.
But researchers at Washington University have found that a simple blood test could be similarly effective, according to a study published this month in the journal Neurology. A blood test to diagnose early symptoms could help make finding a cure easy or cheaper and even guide treatment for the disease in the future, the studys authors say.
For a long time, a blood test for Alzheimers disease was referred to among the Alzheimers researcher community as the holy grail, said Suzanne Schindler, a Wash U neurologist and author of the study. Really, until three years ago, a lot of people thought this was far in the future.
Alzheimers patients develop tangles and plaques of amyloid protein in their brains. Scientists have not determined the plaques are what cause Alzheimers memory loss, but they do know those proteins are present in the brain decades before symptoms start.
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