Landmark study reveals earlier sign of Alzheimer’s than amyloid build-up

By leveraging big data analytics on an enormous quantity of patient information, (including MR and PET exams) researchers from the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) and Hospital have shown that decreased blood flow through the brain is the earliest discernible physiological clue that a patient may have the most common cause of dementia in humans on the planet.  {read more here}

The use of PET/CT imaging accurately assessed bone marrow involvement in most patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, according to retrospective study results. {read more here}

New methods to examine the brain and spinal fluid heighten the chance of early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. Results from a large European study, led by researchers at the Karolinska Institutet, are now published in the medical journal BRAIN. These findings may have important implications for early detection of the disease, the choice of drug treatment and the inclusion of patients in clinical trials. {read more here}

New methods to examine the brain and spinal fluid heighten the chance of early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. Results from a large European study, led by researchers at the Karolinska Institutet, are now published in the medical journal BRAIN. {read more here}

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