Israeli doctors find link between Alzheimer’s and bedsores – ISRAEL21c

Posted: June 29, 2017 at 10:42 am

Dr. Efraim Jaul, director of geriatric skilled nursing at Herzog Hospital in Jerusalem, noticed that many patients with dementia and especially those with Alzheimers disease seemed more prone to developing pressure ulcers (bedsores).

It occurred to him that perhaps the significantly higher incidence of bedsores was not simply a result of the immobility of advanced dementia patients, as is commonly assumed.

I wondered if they were really distinct diseases or if there could be any connection between them, he tells ISRAEL21c.

Quantifying the phenomenon in his own hospital, Jaul found that 76 percent of geriatric patients with pressure ulcers had dementia, whereas only 32% of patients without pressure ulcers had dementia.

He has published three research papers over the past few years showing a clear link between dementia and pressure ulcers.

Jaul says that his groundbreaking discovery is unique.

Thats because we looked at advanced dementia, while almost all research is focused on early dementia and how to prevent its progression, he explains.

Its in the skin

Jaul was the lead author of papers about the dementia-pressure ulcers link that appeared in International Wound Journal in 2013 and in the Journal of Experimental Aging Research in 2016.

Earlier this year, Jaul and Oded Meiron a cognitive neuroscientist who heads the Electrophysiology and Neuro-cognition Lab in Herzogs Clinical Research Center for Brain Sciences published an article in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease outlining their theory about why the two seemingly unrelated conditions are related.

They suspected that the abnormal changes in the brain that lead to dementia are not localized but actually occur at the same time in other body systems. And thats exactly what some neurodiagnostic teams have found.

Working with NeuroDiagnostics in Baltimore, which is developing a test to identify a biomarker for abnormal cell density in the skin of dementia patients, Meiron and Jaul suggest that changes in the skin of dementia patients likely make them more susceptible to wounds.

We expect to see these changes happening even with mild cognitive impairment, Meiron tells ISRAEL21c.

This makes sense, he explains, because skin tissue and brain tissue derive from the same embryonic stem cells.

Jaul presented the theory at a recent conference of the Israel Gerontological Society. We got a lot of interest from other clinicians, he reports.

Two ways to use this information

The practical implications of Jaul and Meirons theory are two-fold.

For caregivers of mild or moderate dementia patients, understanding the heightened danger of developing bedsores will encourage a more aggressive preventative approach while dementia is still mild or moderate. Frequent changes of position and other measures can be taken to keep sores from forming.

From a research point of view, Meiron hopes to advance clinical studies of NeuroDiagnostics skin test for the purpose of pinpointing an individuals type and stage of dementia and noninvasively (and inexpensively) suppressing its progression using novel safe neuromodulation interventions.

If we look at peripheral biomarkers instead of inside the brain, we can identity or have a good idea of what is happening in the brain as well, on the cellular level, he says.

The biomarkers significantly differentiate between elderly controls and Alzheimers patients. There are also biomarkers for other types of dementia but that needs to be further validated.

If validated by clinical trials, the skin test could be a powerful tool for early detection and specific diagnosis since not all forms of dementia require the same treatment.

Having this information will help clinicians prescribe appropriate therapies to slow or stop dementia from advancing to the stage where pressure ulcers and debilitating cognitive impairments can have deadly consequences.

If we identify these early stages we can intervene and delay accelerated cognitive decline. The skin markers are important but the goal is increased quality of life, says Meiron, who also is involved in a few clinical studies that introduce this idea in the field of aging and pre-dementia research.

Link:
Israeli doctors find link between Alzheimer's and bedsores - ISRAEL21c

Related Posts

Comments are closed.

Archives