By HealthDay News Staff
Seniors whose brain scans indicated preclinical disease twice as likely to fall, study finds.
SUNDAY, July 17, 2011
(HealthDay News) — Compared with older people with no
signs of Alzheimer's, those whose brains show early signs of the disease are
twice as likely to experience a fall, researchers have found.
In the new study,
investigators looked at brain scans of 125 older adults who were participating
in a study of memory and aging. The seniors were also asked to keep track of
how many times they fell over the course of eight months.
An increased risk of falls
was noted among individuals whose scans showed early signs of Alzheimer's.
The study authors suggested that falls could indicate the need for an
evaluation for the memory-robbing disease.
"To our knowledge,
this is the first study to identify a risk of increased falls related to a
diagnosis of preclinical Alzheimer's disease," study author Susan Stark,
an assistant professor of occupational therapy and neurology at Washington
University in St. Louis, said in a news release from the Alzheimer's
Association International Conference.
"This finding is
consistent with previous studies of mobility problems among persons with very early
symptomatic Alzheimer's or mild cognitive impairment. It suggests that higher
rates of falls can occur very early in the disease process," Stark added.
The study, which was slated
for presentation Sunday at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference
in Paris, found that of the 125 adults studied, 48 people experienced at least
one fall.
The brain scans of the
participants showed that higher levels of an imaging agent that binds to the
abnormal protein growth that is a signature of Alzheimer's disease, was
associated with a 2.7 times higher risk of a fall for each unit of increase on
the scan.
The researchers noted that
Alzheimer's has been linked to balance and gait disorders, as well as problems
with visual and spatial perception, which could put people with the disease at
higher risk for falls. Based on their findings, they added, these symptoms
may appear before other more obvious signs of the disease, such as memory loss
and impaired thinking.
"Growing scientific
evidence suggests that 'silent' biological changes may be occurring in the
brain a decade or more before we can see the outward symptoms of
Alzheimer's," Maria Carrillo, Alzheimer's Association senior director of
medical and scientific relations, said in the news release. "According to
this study, a fall by an older adult who otherwise has a low risk of falling
may signal a need for diagnostic
evaluation for Alzheimer's."
The study authors concluded
that additional research is needed to improve early detection and intervention
in Alzheimer's disease. Lowering the risk of falls, they added, could also have
an economic impact since these incidents contribute to higher rates of
disability among older adults, premature placements in nursing homes and more
than $19 billion in direct medical costs in 2000 alone.
Because this study was
presented at a medical meeting, the data and conclusions should be viewed as
preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.
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