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Kids with Alzheimer's Gene Have Deficits
PORTLAND, Ore.,
Nov. 7 (UPI) -- A U.S. study has found that 7- to 10-year-old children
who have a gene linked with Alzheimer's disease already show impaired learning
and memory.
Oregon Health
and Science University researchers said their finding suggests changes
predisposing a person to Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia might
occur much sooner in the brain than previously thought.
The study involved
55 healthy boys and girls ages 7 to 10. Among them were eight girls and
six boys who carried the apoE4 gene, which is known to increase a person's
risk of age-related cognitive decline. The study also included 17 girls
and 24 boys who did not carry the gene.
The children
were administered paper- and computer-based tests, including a computer-based
test of spatial learning and memory in which the children use visual cues
to navigate to four marked locations.
Only 43 percent
of children with the apoE4 gene navigated close to the visible target location,
compared with more than 75 percent of children who did not have the gene.
The study was
presented this week in San Diego during the 37th annual meeting of the
Society for Neuroscience.