30 December 2014 | News | By BioSpectrum Bureau
Scientists develop a new method to detect Alzhiemers early
The accumulated toxins show up as dark areas in MRI scans of the brain
A team of Scientists led by Dr William L Klein and Dr Vinayak P Dravid at the Northwestern University have developed a non-invasive MRI approach that can detect Alzheimer's disease in a living animal before its typical symptoms appear.
They have developed an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) probe that pairs a magnetic nanostructure (MNS) with an antibody that seeks out the amyloid beta brain toxins responsible for onset of the disease. The accumulated toxins, because of the associated magnetic nanostructures, show up as dark areas in MRI scans of the brain.
"We have a new brain imaging method that can detect the toxin that leads to Alzheimer's disease," said Dr Klein. He added, "Using MRI, we can see the toxins attached to neurons in the brain," Klein said. "We expect to use this tool to detect this disease early and to help identify drugs that can effectively eliminate the toxin and improve health."
This new MRI probe technology is detecting something different from conventional technology: toxic amyloid beta oligomers instead of plaques, which occur at a stage of Alzheimer's when therapeutic intervention would be very late. Amyloid beta oligomers now are widely believed to be the culprit in the onset of Alzheimer's disease and subsequent memory loss.
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