New Study Shows That Most Older People
With Mild Cognitive Impairment Have
Alzheimer's Disease Or Cerebral Vascular Disease
Chicago, IL - Mild cognitive impairment in older people is not
a normal part of growing old but rather appears to be an indicator of
Alzheimer's disease or cerebral vascular disease, according to a study
published in the March 8 issue of the journal, Neurology.
"The study shows that mild cognitive impairment is often the
earliest clinical manifestation of one or both of two common
age-related neurological diseases," said
Dr. David A. Bennett, director of the Rush Alzheimer's Disease
Center at Rush University Medical Center and the principal author of
the paper. "From a clinical standpoint, even mild loss of cognitive
function in older people should not be viewed as normal, but as an
indication of a disease process," said Bennett.
This is the first study involving a large number of subjects
who were followed until they developed mild cognitive impairment or
dementia, and then died. The study involved examining brain tissue from
180 people, including 37 with mild cognitive impairment, 60 without
cognitive impairment, and the rest with dementia. All were Catholic
nuns, priest or brothers who agreed to participate in the National
Institute on Aging (NIA) funded Religious Orders Study. Since 1993 more
than 1000 persons have agreed to annual clinical evaluations and to
donate their brains to the Rush investigators at the time of death.
Study participants took tests of memory, language, attention
and other cognitive abilities each year to document their clinical
status. The diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was made when
impaired performance on these tests was not severe enough to warrant a
diagnosis of dementia. After death, the investigators measured the
amount of Alzheimer's disease pathology and cerebral infarcts (strokes)
through brain autopsy. Of the 37 individuals with MCI, more than half
(23) met pathologic criteria for Alzheimer's disease, and nearly a
third (12) had cerebral infarcts (this include five with both). Less
than a quarter (9) did not have either pathology.
"Because most people with mild cognitive impairment progress
to dementia, it has been difficult to obtain brain tissue from persons
who die while they still have the condition," said Bennett. "We now
know that both clinically and pathologically, mild cognitive impairment
patients are in the middle in terms of the disease process for
Alzheimer's disease and cerebral vascular disease," said Bennett.
One positive finding from the study is that one-third (60) of
the total study participants with an average age of 85 did not
experience cognitive decline over several years of follow-up. Yet,
about half of these persons had significant Alzheimer's disease
pathology and nearly a quarter had cerebral vascular disease. "It is
likely that these individuals have some type of 'reserve' capacity in
their brains that allows them to escape the loss of memory despite the
accumulation of pathology," said Bennett.
Bennett and his colleagues are involved in another NIA funded
study at Rush, the Memory and Aging Project, trying to identify what
keeps these individuals from becoming impaired. "Preventing the
accumulation of disease pathology is a common approach to disease
prevention," said Bennett. "Another way to prevent loss of cognition is
to identify factors that protect us from becoming forgetful despite
this pathology.
"From a public health perspective, the number of people with
cognitive loss due to Alzheimer's disease and cerebral vascular disease
is probably much larger than current estimates," said Bennett. He hopes
that these data provide additional impetus to research efforts to
develop treatments and, ultimately, prevention for these common
diseases of aging.
Adapted from the following source: Rush University Medical
Center
Alzheimer's