Risk for Alzheimer’s disease associated with lower amyloid

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“The findings suggest that the increased risk of Alzheimer’s associated with CR1 is not driven by an increase in amyloid in the brain and that we may also need to consider multiple genetic risk factors in combination,” Thambisetty continued. “It may be possible that CR1 acts through other mechanisms, distinct from those that increase amyloid deposition in the brain. These may include influencing inflammation in the brain, but further research is needed to identify what these other mechanisms might be.”

The BLSA, established in 1958, is the longest running scientific study of human aging in the United States. BLSA scientists are investigating what happens as people age and how to distinguish changes due to aging from those of disease or other causes. More than 1,400 men and women ranging in age from their 20s to their 90s are study volunteers who come to the NIA laboratories in Baltimore every two years for a battery of physical and mental exams. More than 3,000 individuals have volunteered since the study began.

ADNI was launched in 2004 to find imaging methods and fluid biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease that can track and predict clinical change over time. As of fall 2012, ADNI scientists had collected seven years of longitudinal data from more than 1,100 participants at 57 U.S. and Canadian sites. ADNI data, combined with earlier Alzheimer’s research, resulted in the general acceptance of the concept that Alzheimer’s disease pathology begins several years before any external symptoms appear. ADNI’s unprecedented open access data policy is a key component of the study’s success.

Source: National Institute on Aging.

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