Alzheimer’s may be problem of accessing memories, not of storing memories

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Researchers at MIT may have made an important breakthrough in the fight against Alzheimer’s Disease.

The school announced Wednesday that it may be possible to retrieve recent memories of Alzheimer’s patients that were thought to have been “lost” to the disease.

Neuroscientists reached that conclusion after extensive tests on mice that have been genetically modified to develop Alzheimer’s symptoms.

First, the Alzheimer’s mice were put in a chamber with normal mice and all received a foot shock. When the mice were put back in the chamber a few days later, only the normal mice demonstrated fear while the Alzheimer’s mice didn’t seem to remember the shock.

But when scientists shined light on the specific brain cells that encode the unsettling event, the Alzheimer’s mice immediately showed fear.

“Directly activating the cells that we believe are holding the memory gets them to retrieve it,” MIT graduate student Dheeraj Roy said. “This suggests that it is indeed an access problem to the information, not that they’re unable to learn or store this memory.”

The researchers said this is the first study of its kind to show that while it may be hard for people with early Alzheimer’s to access memories, they are still retrievable.

Read full, original post: Memories ‘Lost’ To Alzheimer’s Can Be Recovered, MIT Study Suggests

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