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Research offers a better understanding of the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s

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New research uncovers early shifts in the brain that may help explain how Alzheimer’s begins.

Many people have experienced that unsettling moment when a familiar detail slips away for no clear reason.

Most of the time it’s simply stress, fatigue or distraction. But for researchers studying Alzheimer’s disease, these small lapses represent the starting point of a much bigger question: what exactly changes in the brain long before memory loss becomes noticeable?

Hidden shifts inside the brain

A research team from Indiana University School of Medicine has mapped subtle patterns in brain function that appear long before standard Alzheimer’s markers are visible.

Their findings, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia, suggest that the brain’s energy use and blood supply evolve in complex ways during the earliest phases of the disease.

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Patterns that don’t follow the rules

Instead of progressing in a straight line, the brain appears to shift between different states. Some areas increase blood flow while losing metabolic efficiency, while others do the opposite.

Regions tied to learning and memory often show these changes first. Researchers believe the body is attempting to compensate for early stress by rerouting energy and activating support cells, but these mechanisms eventually become overwhelmed.
Key early indicators include:

  • Mismatches between blood flow and glucose use
  • Increased immune activity in glial and microglial cells
  • Region-specific changes progressing at different speeds

A potential new path for detection

While more studies are needed, scientists see potential in these early patterns. They may one day serve as complementary markers alongside amyloid and tau, allowing clinicians to identify risk years earlier than current methods.

However, the researchers emphasise that larger and more diverse data sets are necessary before any clinical use is possible.

Also read: New research reveals: Creativity can slow brain aging

The findings contribute to a growing understanding that Alzheimer’s begins long before symptoms emerge — in small, quiet shifts happening deep inside the brain.

Article is based on information from Medical News Today and JNneurosci

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