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Scientists explore new way to spot Alzheimer’s before symptoms

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A simple blood test may spot Alzheimer’s years before any symptoms appear.

It’s a quiet worry many people carry. Not something you talk about every day, but it’s there in the background. Small lapses, names that take a second longer to recall, moments that make you pause.

What if the real signs begin long before any of that?

Earlier than we thought

Researchers from Mass General Brigham believe they may have found a way to spot Alzheimer’s much earlier than doctors can today, according to Medical News Today.

Their study, published in Nature Communications, focuses on a protein in the blood called pTau217.

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By measuring it, scientists were able to identify changes linked to Alzheimer’s years before people showed symptoms.

Until now, brain scans have been the go-to method for detecting early disease activity. But this research suggests the process may actually begin earlier than those scans can pick up.

What the body reveals

The team followed over 300 adults between 50 and 90 for about eight years, tracking their brain health through scans, blood tests, and cognitive assessments.

What stood out was a clear pattern:

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  • Higher pTau217 levels were tied to faster changes in the brain
  • The protein often increased before anything showed up on scans
  • People with very low levels rarely developed serious changes over time

In simple terms, the blood seemed to reveal what the brain hadn’t yet shown.

Promise and limits

Even with these findings, researchers are careful not to oversell the test.

It’s not something doctors are ready to use for general screening, especially in people without symptoms. Early signals don’t always mean someone will develop the disease, and interpreting them still requires medical judgment.

Still, the potential is hard to ignore. If doctors can identify risk earlier, future treatments could start sooner, when they might make the biggest difference.

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The long-term hope is clear: turning Alzheimer’s from something we react to into something we can anticipate and possibly slow down.

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