All posts tagged: frontotemporal dementia

Scientists discover new cause of neuron death in Alzheimer’s and dementia

Scientists discover new cause of neuron death in Alzheimer’s and dementia

Cell death in dementia has long posed a frustrating problem. Toxic proteins pile up inside neurons in Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia, but the exact route from that buildup to the loss of brain cells has remained hazy. A study from King’s College London and the UK Dementia Research Institute now argues that one missing piece may be a newly characterized process called karyoptosis, in which a neuron’s nucleus shrivels and breaks down before the cell dies. The work, published in Nature Communications, links that process to proteotoxic stress, the burden created when damaged or misfolded proteins accumulate and the cell’s cleanup machinery can no longer keep pace. In post-mortem brain tissue, the team found markers of karyoptosis in a substantial share of neurons from people with Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal lobar degeneration, suggesting this is not a rare quirk of the lab but a feature of human disease. “This study is the culmination of a 10-year journey at King’s, from when we first identified karyoptosis in a relatively rare disease to discovering that it …

New AI blood test can help detect several brain diseases at once

New AI blood test can help detect several brain diseases at once

Memory loss can point in more than one direction. A patient may seem to fit Alzheimer’s disease, only to have signs that also resemble Parkinson’s disease or a past stroke. In many older adults, those conditions can overlap inside the brain, which helps explain why diagnosis is often messy, slow, and sometimes wrong. A new study from Lund University in Sweden suggests that a single blood sample, paired with artificial intelligence, may one day help sort out that confusion. Writing in Nature Medicine, researchers described an AI system called ProtAIDe-Dx that used blood-based protein patterns to detect several neurodegenerative conditions at the same time. The model was built from plasma proteomics data from 17,187 participants gathered across 19 sites through the Global Neurodegenerative Proteomics Consortium, or GNPC. “Our hope is to be able to accurately diagnose several diseases at once with a single blood test in the future,” said Jacob Vogel of Lund University, who led the study. The researchers have developed an AI model capable of detecting multiple neurodegenerative diseases at once. (CREDIT: iStock) …