Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Adiponectin: Hormone affects Dementia in Woman

Women with an abnormal number of a certain hormone are more likely to develop dementia, as suggested by latest study conducted in cooperation with the Framingham Heart Study (FHS).

Participants from the Boston University cardiovascular research initiatives provided frozen blood samples that allowed scientists to isolate a hormone known as adiponectin, which the new research findings said appear to be connected with dementia.

According to a report by U.S. network ABC, the study drew its conclusion on the analysis of 840 participants, which were monitored for 13 years, with 159 of them suffering brain degeneration with one common denominator - high presence of adiponectin.

The results, according to Dr Ernst Schaefer of Tufts University, were somewhat perplexing as the pursued links between dementia and diabetes were further complicated by what the researchers have so far appreciated from the decade-old study.

While science generally regards adiponectin as an important agent in preventing the onset of diabetes, its purportedly dementia-inducing function, at least in the context of the FHS experiment, had caught the researchers by surprise.

No comments:

Post a Comment