Maintaining The Brain's Wiring In Ageing And Disease
Main Category: Alzheimer's / DementiaAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience; Seniors / Aging
Article Date: 06 Dec 2008 - 1:00 PDT
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Researchers at the Babraham Institute near Cambridge, supported by the Alzheimer's Research Trust and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), have discovered that the brain's circuitry survives longer than previously thought in diseases of ageing such as Alzheimer's disease. The findings were published in the journal Brain.
Alzheimer's disease causes nerve cells in the brain to die, resulting in problems with memory, speech and understanding. Little is known about how the nerve cells die, but this new research has revealed how they first lose the ability to communicate with each other, before deteriorating further.
"We've all experienced how useless a computer is without broadband. The same is true for a nerve cell (neuron) in the brain whose wiring (axons and dendrites) has been lost or damaged," explained Dr Michael Coleman the project's lead researcher. "Once the routes of communication are permanently down, the neuron will never again contribute to learning and memory, because these 'wires' do not re-grow in the human brain."
But axons and dendrites are much more than inert fibre-optic wires. They are homes to the world's smallest transport tracks. Every one of our hundred billion nerve cells continuously shuttles hundreds of proteins and intracellular packages out along its axons and dendrites, and back again, during every minute of every day. Without this process, the wires cannot be maintained and the nervous system will cease to function within a few hours.
During healthy ageing this miniature transport system undergoes a steady decline, but the challenges are immense. Axons up a metre long have to survive and function for at least eight or nine decades. Over this period, our homes will need rewiring several times, but in our brains the wires are all original, surviving from childhood. In Alzheimer's disease, axons swell dramatically, ballooning to 10 or 20 times their normal diameter. These swellings disrupt transport but not, it seems, completely. Enough material gets through the swellings to keep more distant parts of the axon alive for at least several months, and probably for a year or more. This is important because it suggests a successful therapy applied during this early period may not only halt the symptoms, but allow a degree of functional recovery.
"We've been able to look at whole nerve cells affected by Alzheimer's", said Dr Michael Coleman. "For the first time we have shown that supporting parts of nerve cells are alive, and we can now learn how to intervene to recover connections. This is very important for treatment because in normal adult life, nerve cell connections constantly disappear and reform, but can only do so if the supporting parts of the cell remain. Our results suggest a time window in which damaged connections between brain cells could recover under the right conditions."
This basic research gives hope over the longer term to the 700,000 people in the UK who live with dementia. Understanding how the brain responds to disease also tells us a lot about how it functions in all of us.
BABRAHAM INSTITUTE
Cambridge
CB22 3AT
http://www.babraham.ac.uk
Visit our alzheimer's / dementia section for the latest news on this subject.
MLA
12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/132045.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/132045.php.
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Interesting Article
posted by Joyce Hall on 7 Dec 2008 at 5:14 amInteresting Article but what if the Suspected Person in early stages of the disease is fearful and doesn't seek intervention due to this fear. Can damaged cells be treated and then repaired? Is this wiring really like the electrical wiring in a building? Can we replace the entire system with new upgraded wiring along side of the Dead useless wiring as we sometimes must do in our homes and offices?
Speculation won't save the 'Defective Electrical System' unless the affected system is rewired in time. If we know this much about "How it Works" why can't we make rewiring age related and offer "Brain Rewiring" to people after a brain scan shows "Faulty Circuitry?". We offer new Heart Valves to people with leaky aging valves and that works well for people dying of "Heart Failure". Sixty years ago doing any intervention to the heart was not possible. When I was young I remember the first "Artificial Heart Replacement". We certainly came quickly to the forefront with "Heart Surgery" and today laymen can do intervention on a person experiencing a "Heart Attack". We are using Elecrtical Shock intervention available on the wall of every business and Office. I never thought I would see the day that this could happen. I want to live with "fixed wiring" and see more intervention with "Alzheimers" and less study of "what if we could or should or would have done this". We Can develope a process to rewire the brain? Is someone willing to try it? We only think. We can safely duplicate the wiring, can we connect it to the brain to run along side of the present wiring? Wll it send the missed signals to the brain? This could result in an additional year of clear daily thinking for the patient with early onset of alzheimers. While one year is small window it gives twelve months to the Scientist to make improvments on the mechanical device used to send the signaland maybe get another six months of clear sensible thinking for the patient. While this is not the total answer it certainly give credance to something tried and something improved. We have studied this horrible malady long enough, lets get an action plan into the first phases. Nothing ventured nothing gained. Up to this date it's all speculation. Someone has to step over the "What If this was tried" and let's "See How this works". I for one am willing to try a new therapy. I am anxious to try "prevention". Short term is better than No Term and if we can relplace the heart which keeps the machine running then we can replace the Circuit Board or at least rewire it to send the on off signals to the Brain. I'm Joyce Hall, from a family Riddled with "Alzheimers Disease"
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