Dementia’s
Signs May Come Early
Jenn Ackerman for The
New York Times
Carol Miller, 61, has never been diagnosed
with memory problems but is often forgetting things. She participated in a new
Alzheimer's study that found that people who notice these memory deficits may
be more likely to get Alzheimer's disease.
By PAM BELLUCK
Published: July 17,
2013 139 Comments
The man complained of memory problems but seemed perfectly normal.
No specialist he visited detected any decline.
A Lapse or a Loss?
As people age, virtually everyone experiences lapses in memory and attention. But some memory changes are not considered a reflection of normal aging. This list may help distinguish between what is normal aging and what could be more worrisome.
Normal Aging
· Walking into a room and forgetting why you entered.
· Having trouble retrieving the names of unfamiliar people.
· A change in memory compared with young adulthood.
· Memory changes similar to others of the same age.
Abnormal Aging
· Getting lost in familiar surroundings.
· Having difficulty remembering important details of recent events.
· Having difficulty following the plot of a television program or book because of memory.
· Memory changes that are worse than others of the same age.
Source: Dr. Rebecca Amariglio, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
As people age, virtually everyone experiences lapses in memory and attention. But some memory changes are not considered a reflection of normal aging. This list may help distinguish between what is normal aging and what could be more worrisome.
Normal Aging
· Walking into a room and forgetting why you entered.
· Having trouble retrieving the names of unfamiliar people.
· A change in memory compared with young adulthood.
· Memory changes similar to others of the same age.
Abnormal Aging
· Getting lost in familiar surroundings.
· Having difficulty remembering important details of recent events.
· Having difficulty following the plot of a television program or book because of memory.
· Memory changes that are worse than others of the same age.
Source: Dr. Rebecca Amariglio, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Joshua Lott for The New York Times
Roger Siegel, 84, also believes he has some
cognitive decline.
Readers’ Comments
Share your thoughts.
“He insisted that things
were changing, but he aced all of our tests,” said Rebecca Amariglio, a
neuropsychologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. But about seven
years later, he began showing symptoms of dementia. Dr. Amariglio now believes
he had recognized a cognitive change so subtle “he was the only one who could
identify it.”
Patients like this have
long been called “the worried well,” said Creighton Phelps, acting chief of the
dementias of aging branch of the National Institute on Aging. “People would
complain, and we didn’t really think it was very valid to take that into
account.”
But now, scientists are
finding that some people with such complaints may in fact be detecting early
harbingers of Alzheimer’s.
Studies presented Wednesday at an Alzheimer’s
Association conference in Boston showed that people with some
types of cognitive concerns were more likely to have Alzheimer’s pathology in
their brains, and to develop dementia later. Research presented by Dr.
Amariglio, for example, found that people with more concerns about memory and
organizing ability were more likely to have amyloid, a key Alzheimer’s-related
protein, in their brains.
And, in a significant
shift highlighted at the conference, leading Alzheimer’s researchers are
identifying a new category called “subjective cognitive decline,” which is
people’s own sense that their memory and thinking skills are slipping even
before others have noticed.
“The whole field now is
moving to this area, and saying ‘Hey, maybe there is something to this, and
maybe we should pay attention to these people,’ ” said Dr. Ronald C.
Petersen, chairman of the advisory panel to the federal government’s new National
Alzheimer’s Project.
Dr. Petersen, director
of the Mayo Clinic’s Alzheimer’s center, said preliminary results of a Mayo
study of healthy older adults in Minnesota suggested something similar.
“Lo and behold, those
who had a concern about their memory in fact had more likelihood” of later
developing mild cognitive impairment, an early phase of dementia, he said. He
said study participants with memory concerns were 56 percent more likely to be
given a diagnosis of such impairment, even when results were adjusted for
factors like education, genetic risk and psychiatric issues like anxiety and
depression.
“These people are
sensing something, and there’s some biological signals that correlate,” Dr.
Petersen said. “I think it’s real.”
Experts emphasize that
many people with such complaints will not develop dementia. Some memory decline
reflects normal aging, they say, and some concerns reflect psychological angst.
People who forget what they wanted in the kitchen or the names of relatively
unfamiliar people are probably aging normally. People who forget important
details of recent events, get lost in familiar places or lose track of book or
television plots may not be, especially if they have more problems than others
their age.
And much remains unknown
about subjective concerns. In some studies, like Dr. Amariglio’s, highly
educated people noticed changes more readily, but in other studies, less
educated people did. Some studies suggest people who worry more about memory
deficits have more dementia risk, but it is unclear if the worry reflects the
changes they sense or if worrying itself increases risk. People with family
histories of dementia could be reporting problems simply because they know
about the disease and its genetic component. And, while a study presented
Wednesday found slight correlations between subjective concerns and the
highest-risk genetic mutation, ApoE4, that relationship remains unclear.
Experts are not yet
suggesting doctors regularly screen people for “subjective cognitive decline”
because much more research is needed and no effective dementia treatment now
exists.
Dr. Richard Caselli, a neurology professor at
the Mayo Clinic in Arizona, said that when patients cited cognitive problems,
he ruled out “reversible things,” but did not recommend testing for Alzheimer’s
because “if we do a scan and say, ‘Hey, we found some amyloid in your brain,’
there’s really nothing you can do.”
But subjective screening has value now for
clinical trials, experts say, because it can help pinpoint people at higher
risk for dementia to better determine if treatments can delay or prevent
Alzheimer’s.
A Lapse or a Loss?
As people age, virtually everyone experiences lapses in memory and attention. But some memory changes are not considered a reflection of normal aging. This list may help distinguish between what is normal aging and what could be more worrisome.
Normal Aging
· Walking into a room and forgetting why you entered.
· Having trouble retrieving the names of unfamiliar people.
· A change in memory compared with young adulthood.
· Memory changes similar to others of the same age.
Abnormal Aging
· Getting lost in familiar surroundings.
· Having difficulty remembering important details of recent events.
· Having difficulty following the plot of a television program or book because of memory.
· Memory changes that are worse than others of the same age.
Source: Dr. Rebecca Amariglio, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
As people age, virtually everyone experiences lapses in memory and attention. But some memory changes are not considered a reflection of normal aging. This list may help distinguish between what is normal aging and what could be more worrisome.
Normal Aging
· Walking into a room and forgetting why you entered.
· Having trouble retrieving the names of unfamiliar people.
· A change in memory compared with young adulthood.
· Memory changes similar to others of the same age.
Abnormal Aging
· Getting lost in familiar surroundings.
· Having difficulty remembering important details of recent events.
· Having difficulty following the plot of a television program or book because of memory.
· Memory changes that are worse than others of the same age.
Source: Dr. Rebecca Amariglio, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Readers’ Comments
Share your thoughts.
Major studies like
the Alzheimer’s
Disease Neuroimaging Initiative are adding subjective memory
complaint categories. So will an important trial to see if an anti-amyloid drug
can prevent dementia in cognitively normal people with amyloid in their brains.
“People have been
interested in this subjective concern for a long time, but we didn’t have a way
to say is this normal,” said Dr. Reisa Sperling, who runs Brigham and Women’s
Alzheimer’s program and is helping lead the coming anti-amyloid study.
Not long ago, most
experts considered subjective concerns unmeasurable or related to depression or
anxiety. Frank Jessen, a researcher at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases,
said his first study on the topic, submitted to journals around 2004, “got
rejected everywhere,” but in 2012, the same study with more years of data was
accepted by Neurology, a major journal.
In November, a working
group of leading experts was formed, headed by Dr. Jessen. The name “subjective
cognitive decline” was chosen after some debate, with some experts preferring
other terms.
Dr. Jessen said in
diseases from arthritis to Parkinson’s, people often feel something is wrong
before others notice. In most phases of dementia, family members and friends
see deficits, but the disease has usually stolen the person’s ability to
recognize them. But at the subjective phase, studies suggest family members may
miss problems; the person may feel his mind working harder, but he still
functions well.
One of Dr. Caselli’s
patients, Roger Siegel, 84, has noticed problems for at least five years, and
said he now remembers about 30 percent of what he would like to, and has
trouble concentrating. “I take a shower and wonder did I wash that leg,” he
said. In books, “many times I forget which character is which.”
Recently, he bought six
packages of pie filling instead of one “because I asked somebody where would I
find it and the answer was Aisle 6, so I wrote down 6, but by the time I got to
the aisle, I picked up six of the thing.”
Neither his wife nor Dr.
Caselli perceive these difficulties.
“I know I’m losing my
mind,” Mr. Siegel said, “but according to Caselli, I’m fine.”
Dr. Caselli said Mr.
Siegel has “been saying he is declining for years,” and was given a diagnosis
at another clinic of mild cognitive impairment three years ago “based on his
subjective complaints, when he had no evidence of decline and I told him so.”
But recently
fine-grained cognitive measures showed he had “slight decline on his tests, and
so may possibly be at a very early stage of a very slowly progressive
degenerative syndrome,” Dr. Caselli said.
The working group aims
to develop standardized subjective cognitive tests so when treatments become
available doctors can eventually use them as a “cheap and noninvasive” way to
help identify people at greater risk, said Dr. Petersen. “We can’t do M.R.I.s
and scanning on everyone,” he said.
Current tests range from
an eight-page assessment in Dr. Amariglio’s research to one question included
in a broader University of Kentucky study of dementia. But Richard Kryscio, a
biostatistician and study leader, said those reporting memory changes since
their last visit were 2.8 times as likely to develop mild cognitive impairment
or dementia years later, and autopsies of participants who died found more
Alzheimer’s plaques and tangles in people with subjective cognitive concerns.
Experts say the goal is
a test identifying which subjective concerns are potentially worrisome, since
not all are.
Sharon Atkinson-Mallory,
70, of Belmont, Mass., a participant in Dr. Amariglio’s study of people without
symptoms, said she had occasional trouble putting names to faces and remembering
why she entered a room. But Ms. Atkinson-Mallory, a psychotherapist, maintains
a practice, exercises, pursues a genealogy hobby, and considers her issues
similar to those of others her age.
Carol Miller, 61, of
Rochester, Minn., part of the Mayo Clinic’s study of cognitively healthy
adults, seems more concerned. A registered nurse who retired after being laid
off a few years ago, she has forgotten cardiovascular and neurological
vocabulary that once “I would recall very easily,” she said. “I don’t trust
myself as a safe R.N. because I don’t have the knowledge anymore.”
When shopping for
blueberry filling for her daughter’s birthday cake, she twice reached the
checkout counter having forgotten it. And twice she has left the stove on. “I
could’ve burned the house down,” she said. “That was scary, like ‘Wow, what’s
the deal there?’ ”
Still, she said, “so far they tell me I’m
normal.”
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