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Showing posts with label brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brain. Show all posts

Early Balding May Be Linked With Lou Gehrig's Disease

Friday, August 30, 2013


Men who show signs of early balding may be at an increased risk of the rare but incurable disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also called Lou Gehrig's disease, a new study finds.

The link between the two conditions may provide a new direction in investigating the poorly understood neurodegenerative condition, the researchers said.

The researchers looked at more than 50,000 men ages 46 to 81, and asked them to recall the shape of their hairline at age 45, and choose from a series of pictures depicting no balding, moderate or extensive balding.

Nearly 44 percent of men reported no balding, about 42 percent of men reported moderate balding and 14 percent reported extensive balding at 45 years old.

Sixteen years later, 11 of 5,500 men who had reported extensive balding were diagnosed with ALS, while 13 of 17,500 men with no balding were affected by the disease. The researchers calculated that men with extensive early balding were about three times as likely to develop ALS, compared with men who hadn't lost hair early in life.

The researchers said their results should be interpreted cautiously until the link between early balding and ALS is confirmed in future studies.

"This doesn't mean that bald people should worry," said study author Elinor Fondell, researcher at Harvard School of Public Health. Moreover, the link may not be true for everyone there were 11 people diagnosed with ALS who didn't have early balding, Fondell noted.

A mysterious disease

ALS is a disease of the nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control muscle movement. The early symptoms of the condition usually include weakness and shrinking of muscles, and as the condition progresses, patients develop disabling movement problems, and ultimately cannot breathe on their own.

About 5,600 people in the United States are diagnosed with ALS each year, according to the ALS Association. Men are at higher risk for ALS than women. Half of people affected by the disease live more than three years after diagnosis, but less than 10 percent of patients live more than 10 years after diagnosis.

"We know very little about what causes ALS, and there's only one approved drug that prolongs life, for about three months," Fondell said.

"If the link between early balding and ALS can be confirmed in other populations, and if other researchers look at this on a molecular level and see if there's some basis to this, then that in the future may lead to new drugs for ALS," she said.

Men in the study with moderate early balding had a 50 percent higher risk of ALS compared with men with no balding. The results showed a clear trend: with increasing levels of balding at age 45, the risk of ALS increased, the researchers said.

The results were controlled for potential risk factors of both early balding or ALS, such as smoking, weight, as well as vitamin E intake, which may protect against ALS.

What may underlie the link

One possible mechanism for a link between ALS and early balding may involve a protein called the androgen receptor, a protein that regulates the hormone testosterone and has been shown to be associated with an increased risk of early balding.

In 1980, researchers proposed the possibility that androgen receptor is involved in ALS. The idea originated when researchers observed that the disease affected all motor neurons except those that lacked the androgen receptor.

"Everybody got so excited about this theory," Fondell said. "So they tested it, but found that the androgen receptor does work," so the idea wasn't pursued further.

"I think they dropped it too early," Fondell said.

Another possible explanation could involve a genetic variation in early balding recently identified in an analysis of genetic studies of the condition. The variation is in a gene located close to another gene that has been implicated in ALS. Given the physical proximity of the two genes, it is possible that one affects the other, the researchers said.


The study was published Aug. 13 in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2013/08/23/early-balding-may-be-linked-with-lou-gehrig-disease/#ixzz2dTnrvd6d

April Is Parkinson’s Disease Awareness Month

Monday, April 22, 2013

What Is Parkinson's Disease

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic and progressive movement disorder, meaning that symptoms continue and worsen over time. Nearly one million people in the US are living with Parkinson's disease. The cause is unknown, and although there is presently no cure, there are treatment options such as medication and surgery to manage its symptoms.

Parkinson’s involves the malfunction and death of vital nerve cells in the brain, called neurons. Parkinson's primarily affects neurons in the an area of the brain called the substantia nigra. Some of these dying neurons produce dopamine, a chemical that sends messages to the part of the brain that controls movement and coordination. As PD progresses, the amount of dopamine produced in the brain decreases, leaving a person unable to control movement normally.

The specific group of symptoms that an individual experiences varies from person to person. Primary motor signs of Parkinson’s disease include the following.

  • tremor of the hands, arms, legs, jaw and face
  • bradykinesia or slowness of movement
  • rigidity or stiffness of the limbs and trunk
  • postural instability or impaired balance and coordination

Scientists are also exploring the idea that loss of cells in other areas of the brain and body contribute to Parkinson’s. For example, researchers have discovered that the hallmark sign of Parkinson’s disease — clumps of a protein alpha-synuclein, which are also called Lewy Bodies — are found not only in the mid-brain but also in the brain stem and the olfactory bulb.

These areas of the brain correlate to nonmotor functions such as sense of smell and sleep regulation. The presence of Lewy bodies in these areas could explain the nonmotor symptoms experienced by some people with PD before any motor sign of the disease appears. The intestines also have dopamine cells that degenerate in Parkinson’s, and this may be important in the gastrointestinal symptoms that are part of the disease.

Go to:  http://www.pdf.org/en for more information on Parkinson's and how you can help those whose lives have been affected by this disease.

Alzheimer's Memory Walk - Los Angeles Nov. 7th

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Memory Walk 2010


Memory Walk is the nation's largest event to raise awareness and funds for Alzheimer care, support and research — and it calls on people of all ages to take action in the fight. Year-round, our participants are leaders in the effort to defeat this devastating disease.

Every 70 seconds, an American develops Alzheimer's, a fatal, progressive brain disease.  While there is no cure, there is something you CAN do.  Walk with a purpose.  Walk to end Alzheimer's!

So grab a friend, family member or co-worker and get on the move to end Alzheimer's!

For more information: Memory Walk