http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/10/15/health/main3368895.shtml
Blood  Test Could ID Alzheimer's Patients
Researchers at Stanford University say  they have developed a potentially pathbreaking blood test that could help to  identify patients with Alzheimer's disease. 
According to a paper  published in the online edition of the British journal Nature Medicine,  preliminary studies by a team of scientists led by a Stanford neurology  professor show the test is yielding promising results in predicting which  patients with mild memory loss are at high risk of developing Alzheimer's  disease. 
In a study of 259 blood samples, the test identified early  markers for Alzheimer's with 90 percent accuracy, reports CBS News correspondent  John Blackstone. 
Today only an autopsy can establish for sure that a  patient had Alzheimer's. Brain scans and spinal taps are helpful but they're not  certain. 
There is still plenty of lab work to be done, more rigorous  research before it's proven a simple blood test can diagnose Alzheimer's, but  those working on the test are hopeful it can be approved for use by 2009, adds  Blackstone. 
Currently, an early Alzheimer's diagnosis requires complex  brain scans. Spinal fluid can also reveal the disease but that can be a  difficult and painful test.
 







 





 
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