With the number of dementia patients now at some 26 million and expected to quadruple by 2050, Alzheimer’s disease, the leading cause of dementia, continues to be the focus of intense study around the world. Nevertheless, a cure continues to elude scientists, as research continually churns up, inspires hope with, and then slowly inters seemingly endless causes, correlations, diagnostic methods, and possible cures. A roundup of research papers published during a single, one-month period in 2014 yielded far-ranging and disparate results. Tissue degeneration in two regions of the eye, as detected by sophisticated imaging techniques, may reveal early stage Alzheimer’s disease. Misfolded protein fragments, which lead to amyloid clumps that have been previously associated with Alzheimer’s disease, can now be detected in cerebrospinal fluid. A new kind of vibrating scanner, whose motion is like that of a sewing machine needle, is giving scientists a better look at oligomers, proteins thought to cause Alzheimer’s disease. Mitochondrial defects observed in Alzheimer’s and other diseases may now be treatable. Eye behavior during reading, including fixation on new information and slower eye movements, may be an early indication of Alzheimer’s disease.
Summary: Alzheimer’s disease, (leading cause of demetia) cure is still not available. Eyes can reveal early stage disease.Abnormal Protein fragments leads to amyloid clumps which is linked with alzheimer disease can be detected in cerebrospinal fluid. New kind of scanner gives better look of oligomers proteins which are thought to cause AZ. Mitochondrial defects are now treatable. Eye behavior can also be used to detect early stage AZ.
1. With which aspect of Alzheimer’s disease do MOST papers mentioned in this passage deal?
(A) Prevalence
(B) Diagnosis
Mostly it talks about diagnosis.
(C) Progression
(D) Treatment
(E) Causes
2. The passage suggests all of the following ideas about Alzheimer’s disease EXCEPT:
(A) a sense of urgency is implicit in all new and ongoing research into the disease.
With the number of dementia patients now at some 26 million and expected to quadruple by 2050---> this shows sense of urgency
(B) the history of Alzheimer’s disease is littered with the corpses of old ideas.
a cure continues to elude scientists, as research continually churns up, inspires hope with, and then slowly inters seemingly endless causes, correlations, diagnostic methods, and possible cures --> corpses of old ideas
(C) some research efforts in the past have focused on amyloid clumps.
Misfolded protein fragments, which lead to amyloid clumps that have been previously associated with Alzheimer’s disease
(D) there may be multiple observable indicators of the early stage disease.
Mentioned in all over the two paragraphs.
(E) causes and manifestations of the disease are most likely various and multiple.
Correct