A recent study published by Duke University
researchers in the journal Retina suggests that an observed loss of blood vessels in retina
may reflect changes in brain health and could signal Alzheimer’s disease. In
people with healthy brains, microscopic blood vessels form a dense web at the
back of the eye inside the retina. In the eyes of people with Alzheimer’s
disease, that web was less dense and even sparse in places. The differences in
density were statistically significant after researchers controlled for factors
including age, sex, and level of education. The study measured blood vessels
that can’t be seen during a regular eye exam using noninvasive technology that
takes high-resolution images of very small blood vessels within the retina in
just a few minutes, called Optical Coherence Tomography-Angiography (OCT-A).
They concluded that it’s possible that these changes in blood vessel density in
the retina could mirror what’s going on in the tiny blood vessels in the brain,
perhaps before we are able to detect any changes in cognition.
With nearly 6 million
Americans living with Alzheimer’s disease and no viable treatments or
noninvasive tools for early diagnosis, its burden on families and the economy
is heavy. Scientists at have studied other changes in the retina that could
signal trouble upstream in the brain, such as thinning of some of the retinal
nerve layers. The goal would be to use this technology to detect Alzheimer’s
early, before symptoms of memory loss are evident, and be able to monitor these
changes over time in participants of clinical trials studying new Alzheimer’s
treatments.
Please
mention any concerns you have about Alzheimer’s during your regular eye exam.
To learn more about new technology and examination techniques we are using,
please just ask us at your scheduled appointment. You may schedule an eye exam
at Doctor & Associates-203-227-4113, visit Doctor
& Associates in Fairfield County, or
facebook.com/doctorandassociates to make an appointment.
Doctor & Associates offices are
conveniently located at 129 Kings Highway North, Westport, Connecticut 06880,
195 Danbury Road, Wilton, Connecticut 06897 and 148 East Avenue, Norwalk,
Connecticut 06851.