Thursday, December 22, 2011

BMS and the Gladstone Institutes Enter 3-Year Discovery Partnership in Alzheimer’s Disease

Check out this press release hot off the presses about a new partnership to research therapeutic methods to "alter the course of the disease."

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Memory Care

Finding the best care facility for sufferers of Alzheimer's and Dementia is difficult at best. The facilities primarily market themselves to doctors and hospital staff, not the general public. The resources available to families is quite limited. When my family was looking around for the best facility for my grandmother, we had no idea where to start. The referrals from the doctors had a number of issues. My family needed a facility where there were staff speaking a non-English language. When I searched on the web, the only resource we found was Gilbert's Guide. Not all senior care facilities are equal. Their costs and cost structures vary considerably from place to place (with some places starting from $5000+/month). A family has to consider their budget, requirements, and the quality of the staff. Finding a place can be a very stressful process for a family because of extremely limited time to make a decision and lack of resources for evaluating locations.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Alzheimer's Disease Research

This is an exciting time in the neuroscience research community. Scientists are making breakthroughs in our understanding of the brain and diseases that afflict it. One article from Nature (Neural mechanisms of ageing and cognitive decline by Bishop et al) claims nearly 50% of people age 85 and above are afflicted by Alzheimer's disease and that cognitive decline is one of the greatest health threats in old age. The positive aspect is that through more comprehensive understanding of the disease and the brain, scientists have developed more sophisticated methods for detecting the disease and mitigating its effects. One recent paper, Sensory Network Dysfunction, Behavioral Impairments, and Their Reversibility in an Alzheimer's β-Amyloidosis Mouse Model, found a hyperactive sense of smell preceded a loss of the sense that sometimes comes with Alzheimer's. The research is still at a very preliminary stage, but the odds of developing more methods for dealing with Alzheimer's is getting better.