 |
|
A handout image from the ITV documentary
"Malcolm and Barbara: Love's Farewell", released to Reuters on August 1,
2007. The final scene of the television documentary said to show an
Alzheimer's patient "passing away" was actually filmed three days before
his death, ITV said, fuelling a row over fake television.(Xinhua/Reuters
File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 (Xinhua) -- A team of U.S.
scientists report on Monday that people who develop Alzheimer's disease may show
signs of the neurodegenerative illness many decades earlier in life, including
compromised educational achievement.
Scientists from University of South Florida and
University of Kentucky published their study results on-line in the journal
Alzheimer's Disease and Associated Disorders.
Among participants who became demented before death
or had evidence of Alzheimer's disease at autopsy, those with small head sizes
had significantly lower educational achievement in earlier adult life. In those
dying without a dementia diagnosis or autopsyevidence of Alzheimer's disease,
head size had no relationship with education.
Adult head size can be used to estimate the size of
the fully-developed brain. Previous studies have found that clinical expression
of Alzheimer's disease is related to head size, with people having smaller heads
more likely to show the characteristic symptoms of this illness. Larger brains
provide reserve against Alzheimer's, allowing people to function normally
despite having considerable Alzheimer pathology in their brains.
"If brain damage related to Alzheimer's disease
begins earlier in adult life, then having less reserve due to a smaller brain
could compromise intellectual ability in those destined to get Alzheimer's and
lead to them getting less education," said lead author James Mortimer.
"Although it has been known for many years that
individuals with lower education have a greater risk of getting Alzheimer's,
this is the first report showing that reduced educational attainment may
actually be an early sign of the underlying disease."
The study findings add to others showing that
individuals who will eventually develop Alzheimer's differ from those who don't
many decades before.
Other studies have shown that those who develop
Alzheimer's have specific deficits on tests of memory and thinking decades
before the disease is diagnosed.
The fact that subtle signs of Alzheimer's appear many
years before symptoms appear may be useful for predicting who is at risk of the
illness and identifying individuals earlier in life who could benefit from
preventive therapies, said the research team.