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UK body calls for more ageing research backing

The British Society for Research on Ageing (BSRA) is calling for more public backing in the UK for research to help people stay healthier for longer, as an alternative to charities that support research on diseases.
The greatest risk factor for disease is ageing, but we have very little charitable support for research into how to slow ageing, the organisation warns.
Many diseases such as cancers and heart disease tragically shorten lives far too early, or like Alzheimer’s and arthritis, destroy quality of life for patients and carers. There is understandably huge public charitable support for more research. However, the greatest risk factor for those diseases, and even infectious diseases like COVID, is ageing.
Yet in comparison there is currently very little support for research to understand how we can slow ageing to prevent disease. This approach may be more productive in the long term to fight disease. Furthermore, keeping people healthier for longer, or avoiding chronic diseases all together, would be the most favourable outcome.
The UK population is ageing fast, putting pressure on the NHS and the economy. Despite this pressing problem all around us, there is no accessible way for people to support research into ageing in the UK. The BSRA aims to change that.
With a very small budget and almost completely run by volunteers, the BSRA has successfully funded several small research projects but progress needs to be accelerated. More funding is needed because it takes years to see the effects of ageing, so studies are long. Also ageing affects individuals in different ways, meaning that large numbers of people must be studied to make firm conclusions.
Therefore, there is an urgency to get studies funded and the BSRA has decided to launch an ambitious fundraising campaign to boost research into ageing. Initially, the Society aims to fund a series of one year research projects at the Masters degree level at universities across the UK and with plans to raise much more in the future to support longer and more ambitious projects that will impact the lives of the general public.
Chair of the BSRA, Prof David Weinkove from Durham University, says “The time is now to really get behind research into the biology of ageing. We have fantastic researchers across the country, but they are held back by a lack of funding. Evidence-based research is needed to understand how we people can stay healthier for longer, and to then we must make that knowledge available to as many people as possible”.
Dr Jed Lye says “This is a great opportunity for the public to help, for corporations to contribute, or philanthropists wanting a large impact with a relatively small donation; every £20,000 we raise can fund an entire year of research into ageing and longevity, and gets a budding scientist their research qualification.”
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AI can predict Alzheimer’s with almost 93% accuracy, researchers say

Alzheimer’s AI can predict the disease with nearly 93 per cent accuracy using more than 800 brain scans, researchers say.
The system identified anatomical changes in the brain linked to the onset of the most common form of dementia, a condition that gradually damages memory and thinking.
The findings build on years of research suggesting AI could help spot early Alzheimer’s risk, predict disease and identify patients whose condition has not yet been diagnosed.
Benjamin Nephew, an assistant research professor at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, said: “Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease can be difficult because symptoms can be mistaken for normal ageing.
“We found that machine-learning technologies, however, can analyse large amounts of data from scans to identify subtle changes and accurately predict Alzheimer’s disease and related cognitive states.”
The study used MRI scans, a type of detailed brain imaging, from 344 people aged 69 to 84.
The dataset included 281 scans showing normal mental function, 332 with mild cognitive impairment, an early stage of memory and thinking decline, and 202 with Alzheimer’s.
The scans covered 95 of the brain’s nearly 200 distinct regions and used an AI algorithm to predict patients’ health.
Being able to use AI to help diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier could give patients and doctors crucial time to prepare and potentially slow the progression of the disease.
The analysis showed that one of the top predictive factors was brain volume loss, or shrinkage, in the hippocampus, which helps form memories, the amygdala, which processes fear, and the entorhinal cortex, which helps provide a sense of time.
This pattern held across age and sex, with both men and women aged 69 to 76 showing volume loss in the right part of the hippocampus, suggesting it may be an important area for early diagnosis, the researchers noted.
However, the research also found that the way brain regions shrink differs by sex.
In females, volume loss occurred in the brain’s left middle temporal cortex, which is involved in language and visual perception. In males, it was mainly seen in the right entorhinal cortex
The researchers believe this could be linked to changes in sex hormones, including the loss of oestrogen in women and testosterone in men.
These conclusions could help improve methods of diagnosis and treatment going forward, Nephew said.
More than 7.2m Americans are living with Alzheimer’s, according to the Alzheimer’s Association.
More research is being done to reveal other impacting factors.
Nephew said: “The critical challenge in this research is to build a generalisable machine-learning model that captures the difference between healthy brains and brains from people with mild cognitive impairment or Alzheimer’s disease.”
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