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Posts Tagged ‘alzheimers’

2nd Gene Could Predict Alzheimer’s Onset Age

Monday, July 13th, 2009

From the Charlotte Observer:

Duke cites landmark Alzheimer’s discovery

Confirmation is needed, but scientists report they found a 2nd gene for the brain disease, one that predicts age of onset.

By Sarah Avery
savery@newsobserver.com
Posted: Monday, Jul. 13, 2009

DURHAM In what could be a repeat of their blockbuster gene discovery of 1993, scientists at Duke University Medical Center have identified a second gene linked to an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

The new gene not only appears to predict risk, but also pegs the approximate age of onset for the degenerative brain disorder that afflicts 5.3 million Americans.

If the Duke team’s findings are replicated by scientists elsewhere, the discovery could open an additional avenue of research for drug development.

“We now have the ability to look at both [genes],” said Dr. Allen Roses, director of Duke’s Deane Drug Discovery Institute and lead author the study. Findings were presented Sunday at the meeting of the International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease in Vienna, Austria.

The announcement was met with great interest – and caution – by other scientists.

Since Roses and a team of gene hunters at Duke identified the first genetic link to Alzheimer’s disease 16 years ago, many promising leads have fizzled under further analysis.

“I think this is really interesting, but it needs to be replicated,” said Margaret Pericak-Vance, a genetics researcher at Miami University who was a key member of the group at Duke that identified the original gene, known as APOE.

The gene had been the only one associated with late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form. It generally hits people after the age of 65 and gradually robs them of memory, personality and function.

Roses agreed that additional confirmation is necessary. He said he welcomes other groups to verify the findings. He also is working to set up a large international study that will gauge how well the new gene predicts Alzheimer’s disease in the general population, as well as test a potential drug for people whose genetic markers indicate they are at high risk of developing illness.

“We would love to be able to start a study by late 2010,” Roses said.

The new genetic target is called TOMM40, and it has been a subject of interest for several years to geneticists exploring the hereditary nature of Alzheimer’s disease.

Roses’ group homed in on TOMM40 and identified how it and APOE appear to interact and predispose people to get sick.

Like cards dealt from a deck, certain combinations of the two genes and their variations have significance. An unfortunate draw increases the risk of disease, and the risk of it striking before the age of 80.

There are four varieties of the APOE gene. If a person is dealt an APOE4 gene from his mother, and an APOE4 gene from his father, he’s got a double shot of APOE4 – the highest genetic risk for Alzheimer’s. About half the cases of late-onset Alzheimer’s disease are associated with APOE4.

But the other half remained a mystery.

Now it turns out that the APOE3 version of the gene may also be important, depending on what a person has been simultaneously dealt from the TOMM40 deck.

In a way, TOMM40 is a wild card. It comes in two forms – long and short. If a long sequence of TOMM40 is found along with the APOE3 gene, a person has an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease before age 80.

Roses estimates that TOMM40 may account for another 35 percent of Alzheimer’s cases.

“This is potentially a very exciting discovery,” said Dr. Daniel Kaufer of the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine’s Memory and Cognitive Disorders Program. “There has been a big black hole in our knowledge of later onset Alzheimer’s. But the real clinical value remains to be seen down the road.”

10 ways to help a family living with Alzheimer’s

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

1. Stay in touch – show you care (A card, a call or a visit all mean a lot)
2. Treat the person with respect and dignity (Focus on all that the person can do)
3. Do the little things (Drop off dinner or run an errand)
4. Be specific when offering help (Tackle a task on the family’s To Do List)
5. Educate yourself about Alzheimer’s (Learn about its effects and how to respond)
6. Get the whole family out of the house (Plan an activity like a picnic or dinner at your place; include the person with Alzheimer’s whenever possible)
7. Be a good listener (Support and accept – try not to judge)
8. Encourage the family to stay healthy (Offer ideas for support and respite services)
9. Allow the family some personal time (Fill in as a caregiver, when needed)
10. Keep all family members in mind (From tots to elders, each reacts uniquely)

Remember, if you are caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease, you will need help. It is okay to ask for help!

Sad News Hits Home in Charlotte

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Whether it’s stories like the gentleman below, the boy from Greenville, SC a little over a month ago, or any one of the all too many stories that happen around the U.S. and the world all too often, these are the the things you read and hear about that lay heavy on your heart.  Occurrences like these are the ones we strive to prevent, and wish we could end altogether.

Our hearts go out to the family.

The following article is from our local Charlotte Observer, http://www.charlotteobserver.com/breaking/story/721073.html

Alzheimer’s patient found dead in field

State to investigate how the Alzheimer’s patient left unnoticed from an assisted living center in Mooresville.

By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.
cwootson@charlotteobserver.com

A 91-year-old grandfather was found dead in a Mooresville field Sunday night, eight hours after he wandered away from an assisted living facility.

Several investigations are being conducted, but officials at Summit Place, in Mooresville, said it appears Joseph Clay Johnston, who had the degenerative brain disease Alzheimer’s, walked away during a Mother’s Day event at the facility.

“There were a lot of children and visitors celebrating the day with their grandparents,” said Joseph Mikalajunas, president of Bell Senior Living, who owns and operates Summit Place, in a statement. He said there appeared to be no foul play.

Johnston was last seen alive at Summit Place around 1:45 p.m., a little less than eight hours before he was located in a field on U.S. 21, police said. Summit officials estimated it was about 400 feet from the facility.

Johnston’s family said Tuesday that they want to know how Johnston, who could barely walk and lived in a secure part of the facility, got away without anyone noticing. He’d lived at Summit Place for more than two years.

“I’m at peace with the fact that my dad’s in a better place, but I’m very upset with the circumstances around his death,” said Cynthia Tyler of Aiken, S.C. “My dad should have passed away in his bed, or in that facility. Not in the middle of a field, by himself, alone.”

Tyler said she got a call from her sister Sunday night, asking if she had been up to see their father. Her sister said officials at Summit Place had called, saying a family member had signed Johnston out.

Tyler said that for the family, taking Johnston, who was unsteady on his feet and in advanced stages of Alzheimer’s was, “out of the question. Most of the time, I go see daddy for my benefit and he just wanted to be in the bed all the time and sleep.”

The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services plans to conduct an investigation after police conclude theirs, said Jim Jones, a spokesman for the department, which regulates nursing homes. Jones said inspectors had been inside the facility last week for an annual inspection, but the results were still pending.

He was unsure whether Sunday’s incident would affect the results of that inspection. The facility had no deficiencies or penalties when it was inspected in April 2008.

The death raises the same sort of questions about the safety of residents that came up when Mouy Tang, 46, went missing from a Cleveland County assisted-living home last September.

Tang, who had schizophrenia and other medical issues, was never located. In March, a state advisory panel recommended record fines of $50,000 against Unique Living for violations after an investigation into Tang’s disappearance.

RBC Bank and Sentry Technologies have partnered to host a “Round to Remember”

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

RBC Bank and Sentry Technologies have partnered to host a “Round to Remember,” the first RBC Bank – Sentry Technologies Charity Golf Tournament to benefit the Alzheimer’s Association on April 21, 2009 at Birkdale Golf Club. All proceeds from this event will benefit the Alzheimer’s Association Western Carolina.

A Round To Remember