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Women with Down syndrome who experienced early menopause were almost twice as likely to develop dementia at a younger age than those who entered menopause later, according to research in the January Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. In a prospective longitudinal cohort study of dementia and mortality in women with Down syndrome, researchers followed 85 postmenopausal subjects for an average of 4.3 years and found a significant correlation between the age at menopause onset and age at diagnosis of dementia. Subjects with an earlier onset of menopause had a 1.8-fold increased risk of dementia. In addition, women who experienced menopause earlier had a twofold increased risk of dying younger.

White, elderly cancer survivors have a reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, as reported in the January 12 Neurology. Conversely, patients with Alzheimer’s disease have a reduced cancer risk, investigators found. In a prospective cohort study of 3,020 subjects ages 65 and older, the presence of Alzheimer’s disease was associated with a reduced risk of cancer hospitalizations, after adjustments for demographic and other factors. Prevalent cancer was also associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease among white subjects after the researchers adjusted for demographics, number of apolipoprotein ε4 alleles, hypertension, diabetes, and coronary heart disease. The opposite was found in minorities, although the sample size was considered too small. No significant association was found between cancer and vascular dementia.

Ginkgo biloba did not preserve cognitive function any better than a placebo, per a study in the December 23, 2009, JAMA. In the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory study, researchers at six academic medical centers in the US tracked 3,069 community-dwelling subjects ages 72 to 96 years for an average of 6.1 years. Subjects were given either a twice-daily dose of 120 mg extract of Ginkgo biloba or a placebo. Cognition was measured as rates of change over time in the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination, the cognitive subscale of the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog), and neuropsychologic domains of memory, attention, visual-spatial construction, language, and executive functions. Investigators found no significant difference in cognitive decline between the herb and placebo.

A decreased ability to smell is common in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and may be a useful early diagnostic tool, researchers reported in the January 13 Journal of Neuroscience. The study linked olfactory dysfunction with an accumulation of amyloid-β protein in Alzheimer’s disease model mice. “The usefulness of olfactory screens to serve as informative indicators of Alzheimer’s is precluded by a lack of knowledge regarding why the disease impacts olfaction,” the study authors stated. The investigators assayed olfactory perception and amyloid-β deposition in the genetically engineered mice and found that amyloid-β pathology first occurred in an area of the brain responsible for smelling. Mice with higher concentrations of amyloid-β also displayed olfactory dysfunction. Researchers noted the “odor cross-habitation test [was] a powerful behavioral assay…[which] may serve to monitor the efficacy of therapies aimed at reducing amyloid-β.”

The Lancet has retracted the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al that suggested a link between autism and the childhood measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. The retraction, published in the February 2 online issue, follows a judgment by the UK General Medical Council’s Fitness to Practice Panel on January 28. “It has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al are incorrect,” the editors wrote. “In particular, the claims in the original paper that children were ‘consecutively referred’ and that investigations were ‘approved’ by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false.” In 2004, 10 of the original authors retracted parts of the study, stating, “in this paper no causal link was established between MMR vaccine and autism as the data were insufficient.”

Advanced maternal age may be linked to an increased risk of autism, researchers reported in the February 8 online Autism Research. In a study of 12,159 cases of autism from a pool of almost 5 million births between 1990 and 1999, the investigators found a monotonic increased risk of autism related to advancing maternal age (40 and older) regardless of paternal age. However, the study authors noted fathers aged 40 and up who mated with women younger than 30 also had an increased risk of autistic offspring, compared with men in their mid- to late-20s. Yet when the mother was older than 30 and the father was 40 or older, the associated autism risk was similar to that of younger men. The investigators also noted that the “recent trend towards delaying childbearing contributed approximately a 4.6% increase in autism diagnoses in California over the decade.”

 

 

Depression and migraine headaches appear to share a common genetic factor, a Dutch study of 2,652 people found. As reported in the January 26 Neurology, researchers compared heritability estimates among members of the Erasmus Rucphen family for migraine with and without depression, and depression rates between migraineurs and controls. Of the total study population, 360 had migraines, 151 of whom experienced migraine aura as well. One-quarter of migraineurs also had depression, compared with 13% of the controls. Odds ratios for depression in patients with migraine were 1.29 for those without aura and 1.70 for those with aura. “There is a bidirectional association between depression and migraine, in particular migraine with aura, which can be explained, at least partly, by shared genetic factors,” the study authors noted.

The FDA has approved Ampyra (dalfampridine) extended-release tablets to improve walking in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). In clinical trials, patients treated with dalfampridine had faster walking speeds than those treated with a placebo. It is the first report in which a drug for MS improved function that was lost as a result of the disease. The most common side effects reported were urinary tract infection, insomnia, dizziness, headache, nausea, and others. When taken in doses greater than 10 mg twice a day, seizures may occur. It should not be used in patients with moderate to severe kidney disease. Dalfampridine is distributed by Acorda Therapeutics Inc of Hawthorne, New York.

Black patients with multiple sclerosis showed increased tissue damage and higher lesion volumes compared with white patients, according to research in the February 16 Neurology. In a study of 567 patients, 488 of whom were white and 79 were black, investigators compared quantitative MRI evaluations including T1-, T2-, and gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesion volumes and contrast-enhancing number, global and tissue-specific brain atrophy, and magnetization transfer ratios (MTR) in lesions and normal-appearing gray matter (NAGM) and white matter (NAWM). The researchers found that MTR values in lesions and in NAGM and NAWM were significantly lower in black subjects than in whites, and T1- and T2- lesion volumes were greater, both of which indicate a more aggressive clinical disease.

Dopamine agonists can cause or exacerbate compulsive behaviors in patients with Parkinson’s, according to research published in the January 14 Neuron. “A constellation of pathological behaviors, including gambling, shopping, binge eating, and hypersexuality is seen in 17% of patients on dopamine agonists,” the study authors wrote. Because reinforcement learning algorithms allow for computation of prediction error, the researchers used a reinforcement learning model to deconstruct decision-making processes dysregulated by dopamine agonists in patients who are susceptible to compulsive behaviors. The investigators found that the medications increased the rate of learning from gain outcomes and increased striatal prediction error activity, signifying a “better than expected” outcome.

Patients with acute ischemic stroke admitted to the hospital on the weekend are more likely to receive t-PA than those admitted on a weekday, a study in the January Archives of Neurology reported. Researchers analyzed rates of t-PA administration, as well as death rates, among 78,657stroke patients admitted to Virginia hospitals between 1998 and 2006 and found weekend patients (n=20,279) were 20% more likely to receive t-PA than weekday patients (n=58,378). There was no statistically significant difference in patient mortality based on day of admission; however, because a greater percentage of weekend patients received t-PA while death rates remained equal, the study authors noted that those treated with t-PA may be more likely to die in the hospital.

Impaired cognitive function in elderly men may be an independent predictor of subsequent stroke, according to a report in the February 2 Neurology. In a study of 930 elderly men (mean age, 70), Swedish researchers found that taking longer to complete the Trail Making Test B increased stroke risk by as much as 300% for those in the highest quartile, compared with those in the lowest quartile. Each time increase of 1 SD was associated with a 1.48 higher risk of stroke. “Our results extend previous findings of cognitive decline as an independent predictor of stroke and indicate that the risk of brain infarction is increased already in the subclinical phase of cognitive deficit,” the study authors wrote.

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Women with Down syndrome who experienced early menopause were almost twice as likely to develop dementia at a younger age than those who entered menopause later, according to research in the January Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. In a prospective longitudinal cohort study of dementia and mortality in women with Down syndrome, researchers followed 85 postmenopausal subjects for an average of 4.3 years and found a significant correlation between the age at menopause onset and age at diagnosis of dementia. Subjects with an earlier onset of menopause had a 1.8-fold increased risk of dementia. In addition, women who experienced menopause earlier had a twofold increased risk of dying younger.

White, elderly cancer survivors have a reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, as reported in the January 12 Neurology. Conversely, patients with Alzheimer’s disease have a reduced cancer risk, investigators found. In a prospective cohort study of 3,020 subjects ages 65 and older, the presence of Alzheimer’s disease was associated with a reduced risk of cancer hospitalizations, after adjustments for demographic and other factors. Prevalent cancer was also associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease among white subjects after the researchers adjusted for demographics, number of apolipoprotein ε4 alleles, hypertension, diabetes, and coronary heart disease. The opposite was found in minorities, although the sample size was considered too small. No significant association was found between cancer and vascular dementia.

Ginkgo biloba did not preserve cognitive function any better than a placebo, per a study in the December 23, 2009, JAMA. In the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory study, researchers at six academic medical centers in the US tracked 3,069 community-dwelling subjects ages 72 to 96 years for an average of 6.1 years. Subjects were given either a twice-daily dose of 120 mg extract of Ginkgo biloba or a placebo. Cognition was measured as rates of change over time in the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination, the cognitive subscale of the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog), and neuropsychologic domains of memory, attention, visual-spatial construction, language, and executive functions. Investigators found no significant difference in cognitive decline between the herb and placebo.

A decreased ability to smell is common in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and may be a useful early diagnostic tool, researchers reported in the January 13 Journal of Neuroscience. The study linked olfactory dysfunction with an accumulation of amyloid-β protein in Alzheimer’s disease model mice. “The usefulness of olfactory screens to serve as informative indicators of Alzheimer’s is precluded by a lack of knowledge regarding why the disease impacts olfaction,” the study authors stated. The investigators assayed olfactory perception and amyloid-β deposition in the genetically engineered mice and found that amyloid-β pathology first occurred in an area of the brain responsible for smelling. Mice with higher concentrations of amyloid-β also displayed olfactory dysfunction. Researchers noted the “odor cross-habitation test [was] a powerful behavioral assay…[which] may serve to monitor the efficacy of therapies aimed at reducing amyloid-β.”

The Lancet has retracted the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al that suggested a link between autism and the childhood measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. The retraction, published in the February 2 online issue, follows a judgment by the UK General Medical Council’s Fitness to Practice Panel on January 28. “It has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al are incorrect,” the editors wrote. “In particular, the claims in the original paper that children were ‘consecutively referred’ and that investigations were ‘approved’ by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false.” In 2004, 10 of the original authors retracted parts of the study, stating, “in this paper no causal link was established between MMR vaccine and autism as the data were insufficient.”

Advanced maternal age may be linked to an increased risk of autism, researchers reported in the February 8 online Autism Research. In a study of 12,159 cases of autism from a pool of almost 5 million births between 1990 and 1999, the investigators found a monotonic increased risk of autism related to advancing maternal age (40 and older) regardless of paternal age. However, the study authors noted fathers aged 40 and up who mated with women younger than 30 also had an increased risk of autistic offspring, compared with men in their mid- to late-20s. Yet when the mother was older than 30 and the father was 40 or older, the associated autism risk was similar to that of younger men. The investigators also noted that the “recent trend towards delaying childbearing contributed approximately a 4.6% increase in autism diagnoses in California over the decade.”

 

 

Depression and migraine headaches appear to share a common genetic factor, a Dutch study of 2,652 people found. As reported in the January 26 Neurology, researchers compared heritability estimates among members of the Erasmus Rucphen family for migraine with and without depression, and depression rates between migraineurs and controls. Of the total study population, 360 had migraines, 151 of whom experienced migraine aura as well. One-quarter of migraineurs also had depression, compared with 13% of the controls. Odds ratios for depression in patients with migraine were 1.29 for those without aura and 1.70 for those with aura. “There is a bidirectional association between depression and migraine, in particular migraine with aura, which can be explained, at least partly, by shared genetic factors,” the study authors noted.

The FDA has approved Ampyra (dalfampridine) extended-release tablets to improve walking in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). In clinical trials, patients treated with dalfampridine had faster walking speeds than those treated with a placebo. It is the first report in which a drug for MS improved function that was lost as a result of the disease. The most common side effects reported were urinary tract infection, insomnia, dizziness, headache, nausea, and others. When taken in doses greater than 10 mg twice a day, seizures may occur. It should not be used in patients with moderate to severe kidney disease. Dalfampridine is distributed by Acorda Therapeutics Inc of Hawthorne, New York.

Black patients with multiple sclerosis showed increased tissue damage and higher lesion volumes compared with white patients, according to research in the February 16 Neurology. In a study of 567 patients, 488 of whom were white and 79 were black, investigators compared quantitative MRI evaluations including T1-, T2-, and gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesion volumes and contrast-enhancing number, global and tissue-specific brain atrophy, and magnetization transfer ratios (MTR) in lesions and normal-appearing gray matter (NAGM) and white matter (NAWM). The researchers found that MTR values in lesions and in NAGM and NAWM were significantly lower in black subjects than in whites, and T1- and T2- lesion volumes were greater, both of which indicate a more aggressive clinical disease.

Dopamine agonists can cause or exacerbate compulsive behaviors in patients with Parkinson’s, according to research published in the January 14 Neuron. “A constellation of pathological behaviors, including gambling, shopping, binge eating, and hypersexuality is seen in 17% of patients on dopamine agonists,” the study authors wrote. Because reinforcement learning algorithms allow for computation of prediction error, the researchers used a reinforcement learning model to deconstruct decision-making processes dysregulated by dopamine agonists in patients who are susceptible to compulsive behaviors. The investigators found that the medications increased the rate of learning from gain outcomes and increased striatal prediction error activity, signifying a “better than expected” outcome.

Patients with acute ischemic stroke admitted to the hospital on the weekend are more likely to receive t-PA than those admitted on a weekday, a study in the January Archives of Neurology reported. Researchers analyzed rates of t-PA administration, as well as death rates, among 78,657stroke patients admitted to Virginia hospitals between 1998 and 2006 and found weekend patients (n=20,279) were 20% more likely to receive t-PA than weekday patients (n=58,378). There was no statistically significant difference in patient mortality based on day of admission; however, because a greater percentage of weekend patients received t-PA while death rates remained equal, the study authors noted that those treated with t-PA may be more likely to die in the hospital.

Impaired cognitive function in elderly men may be an independent predictor of subsequent stroke, according to a report in the February 2 Neurology. In a study of 930 elderly men (mean age, 70), Swedish researchers found that taking longer to complete the Trail Making Test B increased stroke risk by as much as 300% for those in the highest quartile, compared with those in the lowest quartile. Each time increase of 1 SD was associated with a 1.48 higher risk of stroke. “Our results extend previous findings of cognitive decline as an independent predictor of stroke and indicate that the risk of brain infarction is increased already in the subclinical phase of cognitive deficit,” the study authors wrote.

Women with Down syndrome who experienced early menopause were almost twice as likely to develop dementia at a younger age than those who entered menopause later, according to research in the January Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. In a prospective longitudinal cohort study of dementia and mortality in women with Down syndrome, researchers followed 85 postmenopausal subjects for an average of 4.3 years and found a significant correlation between the age at menopause onset and age at diagnosis of dementia. Subjects with an earlier onset of menopause had a 1.8-fold increased risk of dementia. In addition, women who experienced menopause earlier had a twofold increased risk of dying younger.

White, elderly cancer survivors have a reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease, as reported in the January 12 Neurology. Conversely, patients with Alzheimer’s disease have a reduced cancer risk, investigators found. In a prospective cohort study of 3,020 subjects ages 65 and older, the presence of Alzheimer’s disease was associated with a reduced risk of cancer hospitalizations, after adjustments for demographic and other factors. Prevalent cancer was also associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease among white subjects after the researchers adjusted for demographics, number of apolipoprotein ε4 alleles, hypertension, diabetes, and coronary heart disease. The opposite was found in minorities, although the sample size was considered too small. No significant association was found between cancer and vascular dementia.

Ginkgo biloba did not preserve cognitive function any better than a placebo, per a study in the December 23, 2009, JAMA. In the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory study, researchers at six academic medical centers in the US tracked 3,069 community-dwelling subjects ages 72 to 96 years for an average of 6.1 years. Subjects were given either a twice-daily dose of 120 mg extract of Ginkgo biloba or a placebo. Cognition was measured as rates of change over time in the Modified Mini-Mental State Examination, the cognitive subscale of the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog), and neuropsychologic domains of memory, attention, visual-spatial construction, language, and executive functions. Investigators found no significant difference in cognitive decline between the herb and placebo.

A decreased ability to smell is common in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and may be a useful early diagnostic tool, researchers reported in the January 13 Journal of Neuroscience. The study linked olfactory dysfunction with an accumulation of amyloid-β protein in Alzheimer’s disease model mice. “The usefulness of olfactory screens to serve as informative indicators of Alzheimer’s is precluded by a lack of knowledge regarding why the disease impacts olfaction,” the study authors stated. The investigators assayed olfactory perception and amyloid-β deposition in the genetically engineered mice and found that amyloid-β pathology first occurred in an area of the brain responsible for smelling. Mice with higher concentrations of amyloid-β also displayed olfactory dysfunction. Researchers noted the “odor cross-habitation test [was] a powerful behavioral assay…[which] may serve to monitor the efficacy of therapies aimed at reducing amyloid-β.”

The Lancet has retracted the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al that suggested a link between autism and the childhood measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. The retraction, published in the February 2 online issue, follows a judgment by the UK General Medical Council’s Fitness to Practice Panel on January 28. “It has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al are incorrect,” the editors wrote. “In particular, the claims in the original paper that children were ‘consecutively referred’ and that investigations were ‘approved’ by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false.” In 2004, 10 of the original authors retracted parts of the study, stating, “in this paper no causal link was established between MMR vaccine and autism as the data were insufficient.”

Advanced maternal age may be linked to an increased risk of autism, researchers reported in the February 8 online Autism Research. In a study of 12,159 cases of autism from a pool of almost 5 million births between 1990 and 1999, the investigators found a monotonic increased risk of autism related to advancing maternal age (40 and older) regardless of paternal age. However, the study authors noted fathers aged 40 and up who mated with women younger than 30 also had an increased risk of autistic offspring, compared with men in their mid- to late-20s. Yet when the mother was older than 30 and the father was 40 or older, the associated autism risk was similar to that of younger men. The investigators also noted that the “recent trend towards delaying childbearing contributed approximately a 4.6% increase in autism diagnoses in California over the decade.”

 

 

Depression and migraine headaches appear to share a common genetic factor, a Dutch study of 2,652 people found. As reported in the January 26 Neurology, researchers compared heritability estimates among members of the Erasmus Rucphen family for migraine with and without depression, and depression rates between migraineurs and controls. Of the total study population, 360 had migraines, 151 of whom experienced migraine aura as well. One-quarter of migraineurs also had depression, compared with 13% of the controls. Odds ratios for depression in patients with migraine were 1.29 for those without aura and 1.70 for those with aura. “There is a bidirectional association between depression and migraine, in particular migraine with aura, which can be explained, at least partly, by shared genetic factors,” the study authors noted.

The FDA has approved Ampyra (dalfampridine) extended-release tablets to improve walking in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). In clinical trials, patients treated with dalfampridine had faster walking speeds than those treated with a placebo. It is the first report in which a drug for MS improved function that was lost as a result of the disease. The most common side effects reported were urinary tract infection, insomnia, dizziness, headache, nausea, and others. When taken in doses greater than 10 mg twice a day, seizures may occur. It should not be used in patients with moderate to severe kidney disease. Dalfampridine is distributed by Acorda Therapeutics Inc of Hawthorne, New York.

Black patients with multiple sclerosis showed increased tissue damage and higher lesion volumes compared with white patients, according to research in the February 16 Neurology. In a study of 567 patients, 488 of whom were white and 79 were black, investigators compared quantitative MRI evaluations including T1-, T2-, and gadolinium contrast-enhancing lesion volumes and contrast-enhancing number, global and tissue-specific brain atrophy, and magnetization transfer ratios (MTR) in lesions and normal-appearing gray matter (NAGM) and white matter (NAWM). The researchers found that MTR values in lesions and in NAGM and NAWM were significantly lower in black subjects than in whites, and T1- and T2- lesion volumes were greater, both of which indicate a more aggressive clinical disease.

Dopamine agonists can cause or exacerbate compulsive behaviors in patients with Parkinson’s, according to research published in the January 14 Neuron. “A constellation of pathological behaviors, including gambling, shopping, binge eating, and hypersexuality is seen in 17% of patients on dopamine agonists,” the study authors wrote. Because reinforcement learning algorithms allow for computation of prediction error, the researchers used a reinforcement learning model to deconstruct decision-making processes dysregulated by dopamine agonists in patients who are susceptible to compulsive behaviors. The investigators found that the medications increased the rate of learning from gain outcomes and increased striatal prediction error activity, signifying a “better than expected” outcome.

Patients with acute ischemic stroke admitted to the hospital on the weekend are more likely to receive t-PA than those admitted on a weekday, a study in the January Archives of Neurology reported. Researchers analyzed rates of t-PA administration, as well as death rates, among 78,657stroke patients admitted to Virginia hospitals between 1998 and 2006 and found weekend patients (n=20,279) were 20% more likely to receive t-PA than weekday patients (n=58,378). There was no statistically significant difference in patient mortality based on day of admission; however, because a greater percentage of weekend patients received t-PA while death rates remained equal, the study authors noted that those treated with t-PA may be more likely to die in the hospital.

Impaired cognitive function in elderly men may be an independent predictor of subsequent stroke, according to a report in the February 2 Neurology. In a study of 930 elderly men (mean age, 70), Swedish researchers found that taking longer to complete the Trail Making Test B increased stroke risk by as much as 300% for those in the highest quartile, compared with those in the lowest quartile. Each time increase of 1 SD was associated with a 1.48 higher risk of stroke. “Our results extend previous findings of cognitive decline as an independent predictor of stroke and indicate that the risk of brain infarction is increased already in the subclinical phase of cognitive deficit,” the study authors wrote.

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