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quarta-feira, 14 de setembro de 2011

Chá verde ajuda na perda de peso e traz outros benefícios


Aliado saudável
O chá verde pode ser um aliado alimentar para a perda de peso e a diminuição da gordura corporal.
A conclusão é da pesquisadora Gabrielle Aparecida Cardoso, da Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz (Esalq) da USP.
Gabrielle comparou a taxa metabólica de mulheres com sobrepeso e obesidade grau I, pré e pós consumo de chá verde, aliado ou não à prática de exercício físico.
Ao mesmo tempo, o estudo avaliou a aceitabilidade da bebida, bem como possíveis reações adversas causadas pelo seu consumo.
Dietas com chá verde
O estudo avaliou os efeitos do consumo de chá verde e da prática ou não de exercício físico resistido sobre a Taxa Metabólica de Repouso (TMR) e a composição corporal em mulheres com índice de massa corporal entre 25 quilos por metro (kg/m) a 35 kg/m.
As voluntárias foram divididas em quatro grupos e seguiram a dieta durante dois meses.
As voluntárias do grupo 1 tomaram chá verde, enquanto as do grupo 2 tomaram placebo. As do grupo 3 tomaram chá verde e exercitaram-se, enquanto as do grupo 4 tomaram placebo e exercitaram-se.
Os resultados mostraram que o grupo 1 perdeu uma quantidade de peso relevante para o período de estudo (- 5,7 kg em média), com manutenção da massa magra.
O grupo 2, utilizando placebo, não perdeu peso, ganhou massa gorda e perdeu massa magra.
As participantes do grupo 3 (chá verde + exercício físico de resistência) tiveram sua composição corporal modificada, apresentando maior perda de gordura, maior ganho de massa muscular, maior aumento da força muscular e redução dos níveis de triglicérides superiores aos apresentados pelo grupo 4 (placebo + exercícios físicos de resistência).
Chá verde com exercício
"O consumo de chá verde aliado à prática de exercício físico auxilia na redução do triglicérides, ganho de força muscular, ganho de massa magra e na redução da massa gorda", explica Gabrielle.
Além de proporcionar uma mudança na composição corporal, o consumo do produto, aliado aos exercícios, auxilia na utilização da gordura corporal como fonte de energia e no aumento da massa magra.
"O aumento da força muscular é maior quando o chá verde é consumido antes da prática dos exercícios propostos," afirma a pesquisadora.
Benefícios do chá verde
O chá verde é a segunda bebida mais consumida no mundo e contém grande quantidade de compostos que proporcionam uma série de benefícios à saúde.
Dentre seus benefícios estão a redução do risco de doenças cardiovasculares e de alguns tipos de câncer, melhoria das funções fisiológicas, efeito anti-hipertensivo, proteção ultravioleta, aumento da densidade mineral óssea, entre outras.
A pesquisa ainda reforça que a ingestão do extrato também suprime a utilização de carboidrato, que gera aumento na quantidade de glicogênio no músculo, auxiliando o aumento da resistência na corrida, e por se ter menos lactato, há uma maior disposição física para continuar o exercício físico.
Veja outros benefícios já comprovados do chá verde:

Relatório mundial do Alzheimer mostra benefícios do diagnóstico precoce


Diagnóstico precoce
O diagnóstico precoce do Mal de Alzheimer, além dos óbvios benefícios à saúde, traz também ganhos financeiros e sociais para os países.
Há intervenções médicas que são eficazes nos estágios iniciais da doença de Alzheimer, algumas das quais podem ser mais eficazes quando são adotadas mais cedo, e há um forte argumento econômico em favor do diagnóstico precoce e da intervenção oportuna.
Estas são conclusões do Relatório Mundial de Alzheimer 2011, que ressalta "os benefícios do diagnóstico e da intervenção precoces," divulgado hoje pela ADI (Alzheimer's Disease International).
Diagnóstico tardio
Martin Prince e seus colegas da Universidade Kings College London realizaram uma revisão abrangente e sistemática de todas as evidências sobre o diagnóstico e a intervenção precoces da demência.
Atualmente, a maioria das pessoas com demência recebe um diagnóstico tardio no curso da doença, quando recebe tal diagnóstico, o que resulta em uma substancial "lacuna no tratamento".
Isso limita bastante o acesso a informações valiosas sobre tratamento, cuidados, apoio e suporte, criando problemas para todos os envolvidos - pacientes, familiares, cuidadores, comunidades e profissionais de saúde.
Veja a seguir algumas das conclusões do novo relatório.
Relatório Mundial de Alzheimer 2011
Cerca de três quartos (75%) das 36 milhões de pessoas que se estima terem o Mal de Alzheimer em todo o mundo não foram diagnosticadas e, portanto, não podem se beneficiar da informação, do tratamento e dos cuidados necessários e disponíveis.
Nos países mais ricos, entre 20% e 50% dos casos de demência são reconhecidos e documentados na atenção primária. Nos países de renda baixa e média, essa proporção pode ser tão baixa quanto 10%.
A incapacidade de diagnosticar frequentemente resulta da falsa crença de que a demência é uma parte normal do envelhecimento, e que nada pode ser feito para ajudar. Pelo contrário, o novo relatório conclui que as intervenções podem fazer a diferença, mesmo nos estágios iniciais da doença.
Medicamentos e intervenções psicológicas para as pessoas com demência em estágio inicial podem melhorar a cognição, a independência e a qualidade de vida. O apoio e o aconselhamento para os profissionais de saúde podem melhorar o humor e reduzir a tensão dos cuidadores e retardar a internação de pessoas com demência.
Os governos, preocupados com o aumento dos custos dos cuidados de longo prazo ligados à demência, devem começar a gastar agora para economizar mais tarde. Com base em uma revisão de análises econômicas, o relatório estima que o diagnóstico precoce poderia render uma economia líquida de mais de US$10.000 por paciente nos países de alta renda.
Para isso, a instituição autora do relatório recomenda que cada país tenha uma estratégia nacional em relação à demência/Alzheimer que promova o diagnóstico e a intervenção precoces.
Autoridades de saúde e Alzheimer
Mais especificamente para os governos, o relatório recomenda algumas ações:
Promover a competência básica entre os médicos e outros profissionais de saúde na detecção precoce da demência nos serviços de cuidados primários - postos de saúde e pronto-atendimentos.
Sempre que possível, criar redes de centros especializados de diagnóstico para confirmar o diagnóstico em estágio inicial da demência e formular planos de gestão dos cuidados.
Em locais de poucos recursos, aplicar as diretrizes divulgadas recentemente pela Organização Mundial da Saúde para o diagnóstico e o tratamento inicial por parte de trabalhadores em saúde não-especialistas.
Divulgar a disponibilidade de intervenções baseadas em evidências que sejam eficazes na melhoria da função cognitiva, tratamento da depressão, melhorando o humor do cuidador e retardando a internação.
Aumentar o investimento em pesquisas, especialmente em estudos controlados para testar novas drogas durante longos períodos de tempo, e para testar a eficácia de intervenções com particular relevância para a demência em estágio inicial.

How Effective Are Anti-Cancer Drugs? Small Molecule Receptor Detects Lipid's Telltale Sign of Cell Death

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2011) — Researchers from Boston College have developed a new class of small molecule receptors capable of detecting a lipid molecule that reveals the telltale signs of cellular death, particularly cancer cells targeted by anti-cancer drugs, the team reports in the current electronic edition of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
The cLac molecule developed in the lab of Boston College chemist Jianmin Gao latches onto dying cells, while bypassing living cells. When colored with a fluorescent dye in tests, cLac allows traditional imaging technology to view the volume of apoptotic cells, which could ultimately provide a faster way to evaluate the effectiveness of anti-cancer drugs. As shown here, a fluorescence microscopy image reveals cLac at work in laboratory tests. 
Researchers led by Assistant Professor of Chemistry Jianmin Gao successfully grafted the key residues of the milk protein lactadherin onto the molecular scaffolding of a short but sturdy circular chain of amino acids to create cyclic lactadherin (cLac) mimics capable of binding to apoptotic, or dying, cells.

Gao said his team spent a year and a half focused on a finding a new method of measuring cell death. The team wanted to create an alternative to traditional tests that measure whether or not a tumor has shrunk in size after several weeks of treatment. The team's focus was on finding a way to measure the presence of dead cells, not the absence of tumor cells.

"We started by looking for a method to detect dying cells," said Gao. "The sensitivity of scientific and medical imaging is better if you look for the appearance of something, rather than the disappearance. What we wanted to look for is that in the initial stages of treatment the therapy's molecules are beginning to trigger the death of cancer cells. That can give you an idea a drug is working much sooner than the current methods of evaluation."

The newly engineered cLac molecules could prove useful as a prognostic tool which could enable oncologists to determine the effectiveness of anti-cancer drugs in a matter of days rather than several weeks, said Gao, who added that further research and testing will need to be conducted.

"Given the small size and ease of synthesis and labeling, cLacs hold great promise for noninvasive imaging of cell death in living animals and, ultimately, in human patients," Gao said.

The cLac molecule is relatively small, built upon on a cyclic peptide scaffold of approximately a dozen amino acids, yet Gao's laboratory tests show it is capable of capturing the lipid molecule phosphatidylserine (PS) -- a function nature accomplishes by using proteins of several hundred amino acids, Gao said. In apoptotic cells PS flows to the surface where cLac is able to latch onto the dying cells while bypassing living cells. In the current report, researchers colored cLac with a fluorescent dye in order to highlight apoptotic cells for fluorescence microscopy. By using appropriate tracing agents, cLac should be detectable through commonly used imaging technology, including MRI and PET.

The cLac molecule could offer a cost-effective, more stable and cleaner alternative to natural PS-binding proteins used for similar purposes, Gao said. Those proteins are bulky and relatively unstable, contain metal cofactors that make results difficult to interpret and show poor ability to penetrate tissue because of their size.

Gao said cLac could also serve as a useful tool for researchers who use protein as a cell death indicator to screen for millions of compounds. The use of the small, peptide-binding molecule could substantially reduce costs for researchers, Gao said.

Gene Flux Can Foretell Survival for Trauma Patients, Study Finds

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2011) — The onset of inflammation and infection in a person recovering from a trauma such as a car accident or severe burns can be as deadly as the incident itself. New findings from Princeton University researchers who studied gene activity in trauma victims may help to predict and better treat such unexpected complications.

The Princeton researchers produced a model that physicians could use to determine trauma patients' chances of survival based on their gene activity. Each module correlates activity for a specific gene family with the patient's possible outcome (colored lines), which is based on the likelihood of death; all patients categorized as ocMOF v (red) eventually died. A physician would determine the outcome indicated by each gene family, then combine those observations to identify the overall chances of survival. 
Princeton research reported in the Sept. 13 issue of the journal PLoS Medicine shows for the first time that people recovering from a serious injury -- regardless of age, gender or previous health -- exhibit similar gene activity as their condition changes, which doctors can use to predict and prepare for a patient's deterioration.

The Princeton researchers' evaluation of blood samples from 168 blunt-force trauma patients revealed that changes in gene activity -- or expression -- in the immune system consistently coincided with the worsening of a patient's condition. Immune system genes "express" via an outpouring of proteins to help activate and direct the cellular response to injury and viruses, bacteria or other pathogens. Two sets of genes in particular showed massive fluctuations in expression as patients developed complications and neared death.

After the researchers identified the genes that were most in step with a patient's state of health, they created a model based on gene expression that could help physicians better evaluate and treat critical patients.

"Plenty of genes were changing inside these patients as their bodies adjusted to the trauma they experienced, but we wanted to find the genes that, over time, foretold the outcome for the patient," said senior author John Storey, a Princeton associate professor of molecular biology and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics. He worked with the PLoS Medicine paper's joint first authors Keyur Desai and Chuen-Seng Tan, both postdoctoral research fellows in Storey's lab.

"We started this project three years ago with approximately 50,000 documented gene expressions in these patients," Storey said. "We were amazed to see that as the list of genes directly related to a patient's health became smaller, the biological picture became clearer and we could pinpoint specific pathways. It was startling to see something so clean emerge from a study with so many variables."

The $100-million search for the genomic response to trauma

The Princeton findings are the latest to stem from a 10-year, $100-million effort to unravel the genomic underpinnings of why people experience vastly different outcomes to similar traumatic injuries. Based at Massachusetts General Hospital, the Inflammation and the Host Response to Injury (IHRI) project brought together more than 60 researchers from various U.S. universities. The IHRI consortium studied 1,977 severely injured and burned patients at U.S. trauma centers from 2003 to 2011, and the Princeton researchers worked with data from 168 of those patients. The National Institute of General Medical Sciences, a division of the National Institutes of Health, funded the project through its Large Scale Collaborative Projects, or "Glue Grant," program.

The work conducted at Princeton produced one of the project's most significant findings -- that at the genetic level, the human immune system is in fact very consistent from person to person -- said Ronald Tompkins, the IHRI project's principal investigator and a co-author of the PLoS Medicine report.

Conventional medical wisdom has long held that the reason a horribly injured 20-year-old is released from the hospital after seven days, while a 65-year-old with similar injuries eventually dies, is because the basic elements of their immune systems are completely different, said Tompkins, who is the chief of burns service at Mass General and a professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. That assumption makes complications hard to predict and manage. Desai, Storey and Tan, however, have shown that immune responses can be foreseen in the universal activity of genes, Tompkins said.

"There are going to be differences due to mutations, but the general systems operate in a nearly identical fashion from person to person," Tompkins said. "This paper is the first to really identify that the differences in genomic response are quantitative. The systems of the young patient versus the older patient are qualitatively identical. The degree with which the genes regulate up or down might be less and deviations might return to normal more quickly or slowly. But there are no new genes or pathways to recruit, and the direction of regulation is the same in both."

Erratic immune response: 'That's why they die'

The Princeton researchers analyzed data on patients who had been observed for 28 days by other researchers involved in the IHRI project and whose health status had been documented through almost 400 clinical variables describing the patients' condition. As part of the effort to better understand the genomic activity of these trauma victims, Stanford University researchers involved in the project analyzed blood samples to create a profile of white-blood-cell gene expression for each patient.

Using this data collected by the Stanford researchers, the Princeton team first created a system to classify each patient's condition. Tan used documentation of the patients' condition and prognosis to develop five distinct categories based on the likelihood of death from multiple organ failure -- all patients in the fifth category eventually died. At the same time, Desai condensed the mass of gene data into a scale illustrating how each gene's expression changed over time for each patient.

Storey and his colleagues used these scales to identify which genes exhibited the greatest change in expression as a patient's health degenerated. They narrowed the initial 50,000 expressions to the top 3,000 gene expressions associated with a patient's condition.

A second whittling of the list -- this time to the top 500 health-related gene expressions -- exposed two sets of genes whose activity presaged patient outcome within 40 to 80 hours of the injury. MHC-class II genes -- which recognize infection-fighting proteins known as antigens and transport them to the surface of specialized cells that then carry out the immune response -- showed decreased expression as a patient worsened. At the same time, the expression of genes known as p38 MAPK that help trigger inflammation and swelling -- part of the body's immune arsenal -- clearly spiked.

Combined, these observations suggest that trauma patients who eventually die develop an erratic and paradoxical immune response, Storey said.

"Perhaps that's why they die," he said. "The patients in our fifth category had mass inflammation that wreaked havoc on their organs because p38 MAPK was turned up, but the genes that recognize and help fight pathogens, MHC-class II, were turned down."

Using the set of 3,000 gene expressions, the Princeton researchers created a model intended to help doctors correlate genomic activity with health status. The model resembles the methods used to diagnose conditions such as heart attacks by determining the severity of various factors, Storey said. The model is composed of five separate graphs, with each one correlating expression patterns in a specific gene family to the five categories of patient conditions based on likelihood of death that the researchers previously established. The model is set to a timescale of 12 hours to roughly 10 days following injury.

The model shows, for example, that if one family of genes exhibits a jump in expression early on, the patient's condition might be in the deadly fifth category; however, if activity for those same genes diminishes quickly, the patient could experience a good outcome. The same determination is made for each of the five graphs of gene expression patterns to establish the patient's overall risk of infection and death.

"We wanted something a doctor could use in the clinical setting to ascertain a patient's condition," Storey said. "The way to do that was through a model that is incredibly simple and a straightforward depiction of natural processes.

"With the amount of data we started with, we struggled for years before we realized that this type of model was the way to go," Storey said. "It wasn't obvious, and our inclination was to produce a complicated model of all gene expression. It was similar to using simple tools to fix a car when the temptation is to rebuild the engine. But the simple tools worked very well."

That simple tool -- a practical clinical model fashioned from reams of expression data -- is a significant step toward using genomic analyses to directly treat patients, said Stephen Friend, president of Seattle-based Sage Bionetworks, as well as a biochemist and physician. Friend, whose company supports and assists with genomic research with clinical applications, had no role in the Princeton research, but he is familiar with it.

In the past five years, genomic profiles of patients have become commonplace in commercial and academic clinical trials, Friend said. When it comes to treatment, however, the application of genomics is not as widespread. One reason is that the advantage of monitoring a patient's gene expression -- namely that thousands of health markers can be identified through genetic activity -- also results in a problematically large dataset, as the Princeton researchers encountered.

"Their work shows a logical way to tame those tens of thousands of variables and put them in a practical, insightful guide that a clinician can use," Friend said.

"What's more important is that the Storey group applied genomics to an area that really needs it. They ordered patterns of expression in an elegant way that would allow this information to be parsed into particular decisions that would guide clinical care. This kind of work is precisely what is needed to extend the use and benefits of genomics data to practical day-to-day use in the clinic."

'It's like a massive explosion'

The work from Storey's group finally organizes what is known about post-trauma inflammation in a way that was necessary to treat the condition, said co-author Ronald Maier, a surgeon and professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine who oversaw and coordinated the clinical portion of the IHRI project.

Previous research has shown that about two-thirds of gene sets spring into action in severe trauma patients, making the immune response so overactive and prolonged that it can be deadly. The Princeton researchers have provided a method for discerning from the flood of gene expressions the activity that is central to complications, he said.

"Evolution did not plan on survival in a surgical intensive-care unit," Maier said. "These patients are so injured and the response is so massive that it becomes autodestructive. It's like a massive explosion. It's a constantly changing process, so you can imagine trying to track 15,000 proteins that change over time. This work comes in by introducing a new technique to handle this massive amount of data."

In addition, the Princeton researchers have identified potential drug targets for controlling the immune response that leads to inflammation, Maier said. Past attempts to restrain this reaction have failed due to the complex relationship existing between the thousands of genes and proteins, he said. Experimental drugs focused on specific genes and proteins, sometimes eliminating what turned out to be crucial players and upsetting the system even more, he said.

"In retrospect, approaches to this problem may have been somewhat naive," Maier said. "There are thousands of proteins, and fixing one or two of them is unlikely to have an impact. The benefit we want from the IHRI is to use the genes most tightly linked to patient outcome to develop targeted intervention and drug therapy.

"This work provides the mathematical model to understand the body's extreme response to trauma -- the job now is to come up with mechanisms to safely control it."

Recycling Fat Might Help Worms Live Longer

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2011) — Aging is generally accepted as a universal fact of life, but how do humans and other organisms age at the molecular level? At Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham), a team led by Malene Hansen, Ph.D., uses a type of worm calledCaenorhabditis elegans to work out the molecular underpinnings of the aging process.
Germline-less C. elegans nematodes with an autophagy marker shown in green. 
In a study appearing online September 8 in Current Biology, they found that two cellular processes -- lipid metabolism and autophagy -- work together to influence worms' lifespan. Autophagy, a major mechanism cells use to digest and recycle their own contents, has become the subject of intense scientific scrutiny over the past few years, particularly since the process (or its malfunction) has been implicated in many human diseases, including cancer and Alzheimer's disease. This study provides a more detailed understanding of the roles autophagy and lipid metabolism play in aging.

"The particular worm model we used in this study is known to live longer than normal worms, but we didn't completely understand why," said Dr. Hansen, assistant professor in Sanford-Burnham's Del E. Webb Neuroscience, Aging and Stem Cell Research Center and senior author of the study. "Our results suggest that increased autophagy has an anti-aging effect, possibly by promoting the activity of a fat-digesting enzyme. In other words, it seems that recycling fat is a good thing -- at least for worms."

C. elegans is a common laboratory model because it can be grown in bulk, is convenient for genetic analysis, and has a short lifespan that makes it ideal for longevity studies. Over the past 50 years, this humble organism has given scientists valuable insight not only into aging, but also many other biological systems and processes that occur in higher species, such as neural development and RNA interference. The worms used in this particular study were germline-less. It's been known for awhile that germline-less worms live longer than normal worms, and this study helps explain why.

Although they can't reproduce, germline-less worms still have gonads (albeit empty ones). They still produce all the fat that would normally go into making eggs, but don't actually produce them. This study shows that -- perhaps as a result of all this extra fat that needs to go somewhere or be recycled -- autophagy kicks into high gear in germline-less worms.

LIPL-4, an enzyme that helps break down fats, was also previously shown to be hyperactive in these worms, where it helps extend lifespan. Yet it was unknown how the enzyme modulates longevity. Here the researchers found that these two events were interdependent -- autophagy was required to maintain high LIPL-4 activity and, reciprocally, LIPL-4 was required for the initiation of autophagy. Ultimately, they tied both of these events to a master regulator that is reduced in germline-less worms -- a nutrient sensor called TOR, which influences metabolism and aging in many species.

Hyperactive autophagy and LIPL-4 added up to longer lives for these germline-less worms. On average, they survived 25 percent longer than their normal counterparts.

"It's basically a supply and demand problem," explained Louis Lapierre, Ph.D., postdoctoral researcher and first author of the study. "When worms have more fat in supply than they have demand for, it has to be stored. In these long-lived worms however, there's activation of a seemingly futile cycle of breaking down fat and re-synthesizing it. Only we found that breaking down fat is actually beneficial and perhaps not so futile after all."

Dr. Hansen's group is interested in many aspects of aging, and they were excited to discover this new angle linking autophagy and lipid metabolism. In addition to answering questions about aging, this research is likely to advance the molecular understanding of age-related disorders such as diabetes, cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases.

In their next experiments, the team will further delineate the relationship between autophagy and LIPL-4, and their exact effects on lipid metabolism. They are also interested in determining if the longevity function of these pathways is conserved in other animals.

This study was funded by the American Federation for Aging Research, the National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the National Science Foundation, and the Ellison Medical Foundation. Co-authors include Louis R. Lapierre, postdoctoral researcher at Sanford-Burnham, Malene Hansen, assistant professor at Sanford-Burnham, Sara Gelino, graduate student in the Sanford-Burnham Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, and Alicia Meléndez, assistant professor at Queens College-CUNY.

Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease Has Health, Financial and Social Benefits

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2011) — The World Alzheimer's Report 2011 'The Benefits of Early Diagnosis and Intervention', released September 13 by Alzheimer's Disease International (ADI), shows that there are interventions that are effective in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, some of which may be more effective when started earlier, and that there is a strong economic argument in favour of earlier diagnosis and timely intervention.

ADI commissioned a team of researchers led by Professor Martin Prince from King's College London Institute of Psychiatry, to undertake the first-ever, comprehensive, systematic review of all evidence on early diagnosis and early intervention for dementia.

Currently, the majority of people with dementia receive a diagnosis late in the course of the disease, if at all, resulting in a substantial 'treatment gap'. This greatly limits their access to valuable information, treatment, care, and support and compounds problems for all involved -- patients, families, carers, communities and health professionals.

Lead author Prof Prince said: 'There is no single way to close the treatment gap worldwide. What is clear is that every country needs a national dementia strategy that promotes early diagnosis and a continuum of care thereafter. Primary care services, specialist diagnostic and treatment centres and community-based services all have a part to play, but to differing degrees depending upon resources.'

'Failure to diagnose Alzheimer's in a timely manner represents a tragic missed opportunity to improve the quality of life for millions of people,' said Dr. Daisy Acosta, Chairman of ADI. 'It only adds to an already massive global health, social, and fiscal challenge -- one we hope to see in the spotlight at next week's United Nations Summit on Non-Communicable Diseases.'

The new ADI report reveals the following:
As many as three-quarters of the estimated 36 million people worldwide living with dementia have not been diagnosed and hence cannot benefit from treatment, information and care. In high-income countries, only 20-50% of dementia cases are recognized and documented in primary care. In low- and middle-income countries, this proportion could be as low as 10%.
Failure to diagnose often results from the false belief that dementia is a normal part of aging, and that nothing can be done to help. On the contrary, the new report finds that interventions can make a difference, even in the early stages of the illness.
Drugs and psychological interventions for people with early-stage dementia can improve cognition, independence, and quality of life. Support and counselling for caregivers can improve mood, reduce strain and delay institutionalization of people with dementia.
Governments, concerned about the rising costs of long-term care linked to dementia, should spend now to save later. Based on a review of economic analyses, the report estimates that earlier diagnosis could yield net savings of over US$10,000 per patient in high-income countries.

'Over the past year, the research team has reviewed thousands of scientific studies detailing the impact of early diagnosis and treatment, and we have found evidence to suggest real benefits for patients and caregivers,' said Marc Wortmann, Executive Director of ADI.

'Earlier diagnosis can also transform the design and execution of clinical trials to test new treatments. But first we need to ensure that people have access to the effective interventions that are already proven and available, which means that health systems need to be prepared, trained and skilled to provide timely and accurate diagnoses, communicated sensitively, with appropriate support.'

To that end, ADI recommends that every country have a national Alzheimer's/dementia strategy that promotes early diagnosis and intervention. More specifically, governments must:
  • Promote basic competency among physicians and other health care professionals in early detection of dementia in primary care services.
  • Where feasible, create networks of specialist diagnostic centres to confirm early-stage dementia diagnosis and formulate care management plans.
  • In resource-poor settings, apply the World Health Organization's recently developed guidelines for diagnosis and initial management by non-specialist health workers.
  • Publicize the availability of evidence-based interventions that are effective in improving cognitive function, treating depression, improving caregiver mood and delaying institutionalization.
  • Increase investment in research -- especially randomized control trials to test drugs earlier and over longer periods of time, and to test the efficacy of interventions with particular relevance to early-stage dementia.

Protein Found in Heart May Be Target for Colon Cancer Therapies

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2011) — A protein critical in heart development may also play a part in colon cancer progression. Research led by investigators from Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center and the Vanderbilt Eye Institute suggests that the protein BVES (blood vessel endocardial substance) -- which also is key in regulating corneal cells -- may be a therapeutic target for halting colon cancer metastasis.

The study, appearing in the October issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, further suggests that BVES may be important more broadly in many, or most, epithelial cancers.

About 85 percent of cancers originate in epithelial cells that form the body's external and internal linings (such as the skin and the lining of the gastrointestinal tract).

However, the main clinical concern is not the primary tumor, but the potential for that tumor to leave its tissue of origin and spread throughout the body (a process called "metastasis").

A critical step in metastatic progression of epithelial cancers happens when epithelial cells "revert" to a less differentiated state -- a process called "epithelial-mesenchymal transition" or EMT.

Ophthalmologist Min Chang, M.D., studies the healing process in the cornea, perhaps the most highly regulated epithelium in the body. From collaborative studies with David Bader, Ph.D., who discovered BVES and showed its importance in heart development, Chang found that BVES was highly expressed and regulated in corneal cells.

When BVES is disrupted in corneal cells, they become disorganized, almost "cancer-like," noted Chang, an assistant professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences and co-author on the study.

Chang then brought these findings to the attention of colleague Christopher Williams, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of Medicine and Cancer Biology and co-author on the study.

"When he described these cells, it sounded a lot like the way cancer cells looked when they were undergoing metastasis," Williams said. "So it seemed reasonable to look in cancer for BVES-dependent phenotypes."

Chang and Williams teamed up with the lab of Daniel Beauchamp, M.D., to assess BVES expression in human colorectal cancers. They found that BVES levels were very low in all stages of colon cancer. They also noted decreased BVES levels in many other types of epithelial cancers (including breast) and in several colorectal cancer cell lines.

To uncover why BVES levels were reduced, the investigators enlisted the help of Wael El-Rifai, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues. They determined that the BVES promoter (a DNA region that controls gene expression) was heavily modified (methylated), which silenced its expression. In cell experiments, the researchers showed that treating cells with a "demethylating" agent (the drug decitabine, which is currently used to treat myelodysplastic disorders) restored BVES expression. When BVES was expressed in colorectal cancer cell lines, they became more epithelial in nature and their tumor-like characteristics (in cell experiments and in animal models) decreased.

These findings suggest that treatment with agents to increase BVES levels might provide a way to decrease aggressive behaviors of colorectal and other epithelial cancers.

"In cancer, typically the primary tumor doesn't kill you; it's the metastatic disease that proves lethal," said Williams. "So if targeting BVES could interfere with metastasis, that would be very exciting."

The researchers also identified signaling pathways involved in BVES function that may represent other therapeutic targets -- and that reveal new insights into the normal biological function of BVES. The findings could have implications in wound healing and other normal functions of epithelial cells, as well as for many types of epithelial cancer.

"We don't think it's just isolated to the colon; it pertains to a broad lot of epithelial cancers," Chang noted. "And that's a lot of cancers."

The research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disorders, National Cancer Institute, National Center for Research Resources, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, and the National Eye Institute.