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Annotation


Beach TG, Kuo YM, Spiegel K, Emmerling MR, Sue LI, Kokjohn K, Roher AE. The cholinergic deficit coincides with Abeta deposition at the earliest histopathologic stages of Alzheimer disease. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2000 Apr;59(4):308-13. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Revise Mechanism for Alzheimer's Drug? Acetylcholine Increased in Earliest Stage of Disease

Comment by:  John Morris, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 31 January 2002  |  Permalink Posted 31 January 2002

The main finding that cholinergic deficits were not evident in early to mid-stage Alzheimer's disease challenges the rationale for current Alzheimer's therapy, which has been the premise that cholinergic deficits exist early in the illness and contribute to the clinical symptoms, e.g., memory impairment. Therefore, a new research focus will be to reexamine the current Alzheimer's drugs to see whether their benefit in early to moderate Alzheimer's patients involves mechanisms other than simple cholinergic enhancement. Because the drugs do have benefit, there is no immediate impact on clinical practice (i.e., the drugs should continue to be used) but there may be long-term effects if the basis of the efficacy of the drugs is better understood.

Another finding that may be newsworthy is the apparent upregulation of cholinergic activity in the hippocampus in very early disease ("MCI"). The authors suggest that this may provide an opportunity to intervene pharmacologically at this stage and presumably delay or prevent progression to greater stages of dementia severity. I interpret...  Read more


  Primary News: Revise Mechanism for Alzheimer's Drug? Acetylcholine Increased in Earliest Stage of Disease

Comment by:  Steven DeKosky (Disclosure)
Submitted 31 January 2002  |  Permalink Posted 31 January 2002

Author Comment
Background:
Increasing research efforts are directed at detecting Alzheimer's in its earliest stages, including those before it is clinically symptomatic. Understanding the brain changes that occur early in the disease will be key to determining the most effective interventions. A state of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) has been identified in late life as a risk state to the development of AD. However, limited data are available on the pathological state or the status of neurochemical systems, especially the cholinergic system, in this very early state. Since the earliest and most prominent symptom of mild impairment and Alzheimer's disease is memory loss, and the cholinergic system is associated with recent memory function, it has long been felt that cholinergic loss was the basis for the loss of short-term memory in Alzheimer's disease and perhaps in mild cognitive impairment. The present study is the first to report levels of the synthetic cholinergic enzyme choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) in the hippocampus of humans with very early Alzheimer's...  Read more

  Primary News: Revise Mechanism for Alzheimer's Drug? Acetylcholine Increased in Earliest Stage of Disease

Comment by:  Thomas Beach
Submitted 13 March 2002  |  Permalink Posted 13 March 2002

The study by DeKosky does not allow for conclusions about whether or not the cholinergic deficit is present at early stages of AD. The data show that there are differences in ChAT activity between a "no cognitive impairment" (NCI) group and a "mild cognitive impairment" group (MCI) but these groups should not be equated with "no Alzheimer's disease" and "mild Alzheimer's disease" since in both groups, about 60 percent of the cases had CERAD diagnoses of possible AD.

Since even in the MCI group 40 percent of the cases do not have significant AD pathology, the study is really about the clinical groups (NCI and MCI), not about AD stages. This error was also made by Davis et al. [3] in a 1999 paper. To examine the question of whether or not the cortical cholinergic deficit is present at early stages in AD, we have divided cases on histopathologic grounds into a "normal" group (no plaques, with low Braak stage) and a "mild AD" group (diffuse plaques and/or sparse neuritic plaques, also with low Braak stage). Our published results [1;2] showed that the mild AD group had...  Read more


  Primary News: Revise Mechanism for Alzheimer's Drug? Acetylcholine Increased in Earliest Stage of Disease

Comment by:  Steven DeKosky (Disclosure)
Submitted 15 March 2002  |  Permalink Posted 15 March 2002

Authors' Reply
We appreciate Dr. Beach's comment on our publication, and his comments concerning a suggested relationship between cholinergic deficits and amyloid pathology. However, he has misinterpreted our (DeKosky et al., 2002) and Davis et al. 1999 studies of cholinergic changes in clinically diagnosed MCI and mild AD. Our studies examined clinical diagnostic groups; that was clearly stated in both publications. This is not to be considered an "error": this is what the subjects manifested in behavior. Carefully studying clinically diagnosed subjects is the only logical approach to address the hypothesis of cholinergic deficits in early stages of AD dementia.

Dr. Beach's argument compares apples and oranges. It is worth noting that one cannot diagnose Alzheimer's disease on neuropathological grounds alone; in the absence of...  Read more

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