City
Epaper

Study suggests how monitoring blood vessel changes improves detection of brain diseases

By ANI | Published: May 27, 2023 11:06 PM

Washington [US], May 27 : Researchers from Brown University revealed how it is feasible to track the development of ...

Open in App

Washington [US], May 27 : Researchers from Brown University revealed how it is feasible to track the development of brain blood arteries over a prolonged period of time.

The findings of the study were published in the journal, 'Nature Communications'.

Alzheimer's disease is an example of an age-related brain ailment that often takes a lifetime to develop but is often only identified after symptoms have started. Due to this, teams of biomedical researchers headed by academics from Brown University have been researching whether severe neurodegenerative illnesses could be identified decades earlier possibly with something as straightforward as a routine eye exam rather than a battery of diagnostic procedures.

The findings start to provide biomedical researchers with a tool to find and investigate biomarkers in these blood vessels that may hold critical information for the early detection of progressive neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's disease, and multiple sclerosis.

In order to find these biomarkers in the retina of mice, it is hoped that they will use their method to image the retina of humans in the future. This will allow them to study and monitor how the blood vessels change. The project is one of many studies being conducted by Brown University researchers to detect Alzheimer's disease early by looking into the eyes.

"In this paper, we show that using our imaging technology we can image the brain of the same animal over and over again repeatedly for almost one year, measuring the properties of blood vessels of the brain," said senior study author Jonghwan Lee, an assistant professor in Brown's School of Engineering and Carney Institute for Brain Science. "The results potentially open a path to predicting when someone is at risk for developing these neurodegenerative diseases and for doctors prescribing early treatments for them."

Tracking how cerebral blood vessels change over extended periods of time in people who develop age-related neurodegenerative diseases, compared to what regular change looks like, has long been a goal for scientists. It's thought that cerebral blood vessels in people who develop brain diseases show signs of degradation and decline decades before symptoms from the disease begin.

"If we can detect the change in the blood vessels in the brain, or in the retina, for long periods of time, it has long been considered to be possible to predict the onset of these kinds of diseases," Lee said.

Challenges in current microscopic methods have made this type of longitudinal tracking extremely arduous, however, requiring various workarounds. The research team which also included scientists from Brown's Warren Alpert Medical School and School of Public Health set out to find a more direct approach.

The novel method they created combines advanced imaging techniques and AI algorithms to track changes in the dynamics and anatomy of the blood vessels of the brain. The researchers used the method to measure these changes in 25 mice for more than seven months.

According to the study, the research team focused on a non-invasive imaging test called optical coherence tomography. OCT uses light waves to look through the retina and image blood vessels that surround the optic nerve. The team adapted multiple OCT techniques to image brains blood vessels like pial vessels, cortical vessels and capillary networks. They then integrated the OCT methods with image processing algorithms to search for patterns in the data they collected from normal mice and Alzheimer's disease model mice.

Analyzing the data, they noticed differences between normal age-related changes and vascular changes brought on by the disease.

"We found several candidate biomarkers like large blood vessels getting thinner and blood flow getting lower, and, more interestingly, the network pattern of vessels significantly altering, compared to the normal ageing animals," Lee said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: HuntingtonBrown University`nature communicationsJonghwan leeusUs Secretary Of StateUs National Public RadioUs State DepartmentUs ArmyUs Department Of CommerceUs Food And Drug AdministrationUs DefenceUs Justice DepartmentUs District Court
Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsWho Is Parvej Khan? All You Need to Know About the Indian Athlete Secure 1500m Final Spot in 2024 SEC Championships Relays

InternationalNew York Horror: Man Strangles Woman With Belt, Drags Her Between Cars To Rape; Disturbing CCTV Video Goes Viral

InternationalPower Outage in Mexico: Widespread Blackout Reported in Multiple Cities (Watch Video)

InternationalUS: 12-Year-Old Boy Receives World's First Commercially Approved Gene Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

Social ViralTornado in US: Dashcam Records Terrifying Video of Cyclonic Storm Devastating Warehouse in Nebraska

Health Realted Stories

HealthRare brain infection PAM reported from Kerala, 5-yr-old on put on ventilator

HealthExercise can rejuvenate brain, delay cognitive decline: Study

HealthExplained: The rising burden of dengue in India

HealthBlood proteins that may predict cancer 7 years earlier identified

HealthWHO prequalifies Japanese drug maker Takeda's dengue vaccine