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Scientist link blood flow to brain with dementia

The amount of blood flowing into the brain may play a larger role in the development of dementia than previously believed, according to researchers from Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.

The scientists used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to examine the brains of elderly patients with and without dementia related to Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s disease. As expected, MR images showed that the patients with late-onset dementia had more brain damage compared with young adults and with seniors who had optimal cognitive function. But researchers found that the late-onset dementia group also had a much lower rate of blood flow to the brain than the other two groups.

“Our findings not only support the hypothesis that vascular factors contribute to dementia in the elderly, they are highly suggestive that a diminished cerebral blood flow indeed causes brain damage,” said Dr Aart Spilt, a Leiden radiology resident and lead author of the study. “This gives us a clue to the genesis of dementia.”

Dementia is a loss of cognitive functions, such as thinking, remembering and reasoning, that interferes with normal activities. Although many conditions can produce these symptoms, Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia. Some patients with Parkinson’s disease also develop dementia.