High stress triggers Alzheimer’s risk claims study

mem_4_20150828120810_81544 WASHINGTON, D.C.: High stress invites several health problems ranging from depression to heart strokes. Recently, scientists have discovered that people who generally takes a lot of stress are at higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

The scientists from Boston University of Medicine revealed that stress encourages accumulation of key proteins in brains leading to neurodegeneration which is an important symptom of Alzheimer disease.

The finding focuses on the tau protein whose abnormal clumping can damage the nerves of the brain.

New research shows that the tau protein directs the formation of stress granules, which are molecular complexes that allow nerve cells to adapt to stresses, such as injury.

The tau-stress granule complex is usually short lived, but in the setting of chronic stress, tau persistently forms into a cluster, leading to the degeneration of nerve cells seen in AD…

Full story covered in the Dementia Business Weekly.