Collaboration With University Of Washington Aims To Prevent Dementia, Including Alzheimer'sMain Category: Alzheimer's / DementiaAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience | Seniors / Aging Article Date: 19 Nov 2009 Every two years, 2,000 senior Group Health patients check in with the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) study. The joint project between Group Health Research Institute and the University of Washington (UW) focuses on finding ways to delay or prevent dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, and declines in memory and thinking. It aims to deepen understanding of how the body - especially the brain - ages. The National Institute on Aging recently awarded the ACT study a grant of nearly $12 million to continue its work for the next five years. In continuous operation for 23 years, it is the longest-running study of its kind. "Thanks to our dedicated patients - and our team of leading-edge scientists and staff at the UW and Group Health - the ACT study is a 'living laboratory' of aging," said study leader Eric B. Larson, MD, MPH, executive director of Group Health Research Institute. "We've learned about what our research subjects value as they age. And we hope to help them find the best solutions to age well - promoting their independence and providing them with skills to cope with any problems that may occur." At each biannual study visit, participants are observed as they walk and do many other physical and mental tasks. They are asked many questions, including whether they would allow an autopsy on their brains after they die. Thanks to willing participants, the study has gleaned its most recent discoveries, which center on how vascular (blood vessel) disease contributes to late-life dementia, including Alzheimer's disease:
Like the celebrated Framingham Heart Study, ACT is a longitudinal cohort study of people leading their lives in a community. That means it follows a large group of people at regular intervals over a long time to see what happens to them. As with Framingham, insights from the study group have helped other people to stay healthier. ACT the only 'population-based' study involving autopsy and study of diseases of nervous system tissue (neuropathology). The ACT study has learned many lessons to date, published in nearly 250 scientific articles. The study is known best for findings about the benefits of physical activity:
The participants have been patients at Group Health for an average of at least 30 years before joining the study. "That gives us a wealth of medical, drug, and lifestyle information to help answer our research questions," Dr. Larson said. "ACT is the world's only study that can link outcomes for dementia, frailty, and aging to data that captures each participant's whole health history, including medical, lab, and pharmacy records." Source: Rebecca Hughes Group Health Cooperative Center for Health Studies Original article posted on Medical News Today. Articles not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Medical News Today publishes the latest health news and health videos for consumers and health professionals. It has a searchable archive of over 100,000 health news articles. < back to medical news
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