Amyloid accumulation, brain atrophy, and cognitive decline in emergent Alzheimer's disease
Ying Xia, Pierrick Bourgeat, Vincent Doré, Jurgen Fripp, Yen Ying Lim, Simon M. Laws, Christopher Fowler, Christopher C. Rowe, Colin L. Masters, Elizabeth J. Coulson, Paul Maruff

TL;DR
This study explores early Alzheimer's disease in cognitively healthy individuals, finding that amyloid buildup is linked to memory decline but not brain shrinkage.
Contribution
The study identifies early Alzheimer's markers in cognitively unimpaired individuals, linking amyloid accumulation to memory loss without structural brain changes.
Findings
Emergent Alzheimer's is associated with increased amyloid-β accumulation and subtle memory decline.
No significant brain atrophy in the basal forebrain or hippocampus was observed in early Alzheimer's.
Amyloid accumulation may impair cognition before structural brain changes occur.
Abstract
Emergent Alzheimer's disease (AD) represents a transitional stage where cognitively unimpaired (CU) individuals exhibit subthreshold but increasing amyloid‐β (Aβ) levels. The impact of Aβ accumulation on brain volume loss and cognition during this early stage remains unclear. This retrospective cohort study analyzed data from 408 CU participants who were initially Aβ− (< 15 Centiloids) and followed for up to 15 years. Changes in basal forebrain and hippocampal volume, along with domain‐specific cognitive performance, were compared between those who progressed to Aβ+ (≥20 Centiloids) and those who remained Aβ−. Sixty‐five CU participants progressed to Aβ+, indicating emergent AD, and showed faster Aβ accumulation and subtle memory decline. However, no significant differences in rate of BF and hippocampal atrophy were observed between groups. The results suggest that during this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAlzheimer's disease research and treatments · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Diet and metabolism studies
