PET Tracer Detects Synapse Loss Across Alzheimer’s Brain Multimodal Imaging of Neurodegenerative Diseases Links Pathology and Cellular Dysfunction Tau PET: The Field Expands Rapidly Can PET Match Up Areas of Protein Deposit With Alzheimer’s Symptoms? How
Tau2020: Meeting for Tauopathies Debuts Genetic Variants Behold the First Human α-Synuclein CryoEM Fibril Structure New at Tau2020: PET Detects First Traces of Tangles in Rhinal Cortex Primary Tauopathies Get New PET Ligands Tau Receptor Identified on Cel
New Assay, New Cohorts—Plasma p-Tau181 Looks Even Better 217—The Best Phospho-Tau Marker for Alzheimer’s? In DIAN-TU, Gantenerumab Brings Down Tau. By a Lot. Open Extension Planned Confused About the DIAN-TU Trial Data? Experts Discuss Active Tau Vaccine:
Plasma p-Tau217 Set to Transform Alzheimer’s Diagnostics Could Common Vaccines Protect Against Alzheimer’s Disease? Doubling Down on Sequencing Serves up More Alzheimer’s Genes IDEAS Finds Small Drop in Hospitalizations, Missing Goal Lancet Commission’s D
BANish Aβ? BAN2401 Antibody Makes Its Move in Phase 3 Program BAN2401 Forges AHEAD into Phase 3, Preclinical AD TRC-PAD Funnel Finally Touches Down Learning Troubles Spied by Smartphone Track with Biomarkers In Phase 2 Trial, Neflamapimod Aids Cognition i
Middle-aged WTC responders have cognitive problems, which correlate not only with their PTSD symptoms and exposure to toxic dust, but also with biomarkers of amyloid and tau.
Quite independently of what it does to Aβ or tau, ApoE4 stokes α-synuclein pathology in mouse models. People with Lewy body dementia who carry ApoE4 had more phosphorylated synuclein in their brains, and their cognition declined faster.