An Alzheimer's diagnosis often
relies on signs of memory problems. However, these issues usually do not appear
until years after the disease has taken hold. A new smartphone game is using
spatial navigation to detect Alzheimer's before it is too late.
Another person
develops Alzheimer's diseaseevery 3
seconds, according to Alzheimer's Disease International. The number of
people living with this most common form of dementiacurrently stands at
around 50 million. By 2050, experts expect this figure to have tripled.
The last
"significant breakthrough" in Alzheimer's research happened 4 decades
ago, states the latest World Alzheimer's Report. However, a recently
developed smartphone game may alter that statistic.
"Research shows
us that the brain changes associated with diseases like Alzheimer's begin
decades before symptoms like memory loss start," says Hilary Evans, chief
executive at Alzheimer's Research United Kingdom.
"[F]or future
Alzheimer's treatments to be effective, it's likely they must be given at the
earliest stages of disease, before there's too much damage to the brain."
Navigating space
A collaboration
between the organization, the University of East Anglia (UEA) and University
College London in the U.K., and Deutsche Telekom has resulted in a game that
may help experts detect who is at risk of Alzheimer's.
"We often hear
heartbreaking stories about people with dementia who get lost and can't find
their way home," continues Evans, adding that spatial navigation issues
"are some of the earliest warning signs for the condition."
Such problems are the
focus of the Sea Hero Quest game, which encourages players to find their way
around various mazes. So far, more than 4.3 million people across the globe
have tried it.
In the current study,
which features in the journal PNAS,
the researchers compared how different people played the game and found some
interesting results. They analyzed data from more than 27,000 U.K. players
between the ages of 50 and 75 years and also recruited a lab group of 60
individuals for genetic testing.
A game changer
Genetic testing
revealed that 31 of the participants in the smaller group had the APOE4 gene.
Carriers of this gene are almost three times more likely than other people to
develop Alzheimer's disease, and it tends to appear when they are younger.
When the team compared
the lab group data with the benchmark data, they could distinguish between
those with and without the APOE4 gene based on the way that they played Sea
Hero Quest.
Those with a genetic predisposition to
Alzheimer's "took less efficient routes to checkpoint goals" and
"performed worse on spatial navigation tasks," notes Prof. Michael
Hornberger from the UEA, who is the lead researcher. "This is really
important because these are people with no memory problems."
Waiting until someone
demonstrates memory issues to diagnose Alzheimer's may be too late, adds Prof.
Hornberger, because such symptoms occur "when the disease is quite
advanced."
"[E]merging
evidence shows that subtle spatial navigation and awareness deficits can
precede memory symptoms by many years."
In fact, a routine
memory test was ineffective in recognizing the difference between those who
were and were not at risk of the disease.
Source: Medical News Today
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