Can knowing you and your family may get Alzheimer’s ever be positive?
Researchers studying the genetic transmission of early onset Alzheimer's hope their work will result in new treatments that will help people such as Sophie Leggett, whose mother and aunt both developed the disease
At the University of Washington's School of Medicine there is a computer database that states with certainty - albeit heavily encrypted - whether or not Sophie Leggett will develop a form of genetically inherited early onset Alzheimer's disease. But she has chosen not to find out what it says.
A blood test is available to adult children and siblings of those who develop Alzheimer's at a young age and have a family history of the disease. It identifies whether they carry one of the three faulty genes known to cause familial early onset Alzheimer's, presenilin 1 (the mutation affecting Leggett's family), presenilin 2 and amyloid precursor protein. All result in the overproduction of amyloid, a protein that builds up into the plaques on the brain which are the hallmark of Alzheimer's.
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