U.S. researchers discover gender-based differences in Alzheimer's disease

In the study presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America, Maria Spampinato of Medical University of South Carolina and colleagues analyzed data on 109 patients, including 60 men and 49 women (mean age 77), who participated in a major study that followed hundreds of cognitively healthy individuals and individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD over a period of five years, Xinhua reports.
During the five-year period, each of the 109 patients progressed from amnestic MCI (in which the patient suffers memory loss but maintains cognitive function) to AD.
Using MR images of the patients' brains taken when they were diagnosed with AD and 12 months before and after the diagnosis, the researchers created brain maps that illustrated gray matter changes.
The brain maps revealed that compared to male patients, women had greater atrophy in gray matter 12 months prior to their AD diagnosis and at the time of their diagnosis.
The brain maps also showed that the men and women in the study lost gray matter volume in different areas of the brain as their disease progressed from MCI to AD.
"The female patients in our study initially had more gray matter atrophy than the male patients but over time, the men caught up," Spampinato said. "In the men, the disease developed more aggressively in a shorter period of time."
Spampinato said these differences should be taken into consideration when testing new drugs in clinical trials.
According to the Alzheimer's Association, 5.4 million Americans have AD, the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States.
Currently, there is no cure for AD, which lends urgency to research efforts designed to better understand, diagnose and treat this devastating illness.
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