Elevation of serum copper levels in Alzheimer’s disease
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Abstract
Objective: To determine whether serum trace metals and oxidative species are related to abnormal cognition in AD.
Methods: The authors studied serum peroxides, copper, iron, transferrin, and antioxidant capacity in 79 patients with AD (mean age 74.3 years; 25 men, 54 women) and in 76 cognitively normal individuals (mean age 70.1 years; 33 men, 43 women). The relation of these oxidative and trace metals to APOE ε4 allele frequency, neuropsychological performance, and cerebrovascular or atrophic burden, as estimated by brain MRI and ultrasonography of cerebral vessels, was evaluated.
Results: Copper level was higher (p < 0.001) in subjects with AD than control subjects (specificity = 95%, sensitivity = 60%) with a cutoff serum level of 16 μmol/L (1.02 mg/L). An increase of 1 μmol/L in serum copper accounted for 80% of the risk of having AD and correlated with poor neuropsychological performance and medial temporal lobe atrophy (p < 0.03). Antioxidant capacity decreased and correlated with medial temporal lobe atrophy (p < 0.009) and with APOE ε4 allele (p = 0.004).
Conclusions: Copper may play a role in neurodegenerative processes in AD, and serum copper measurement may prove to be a peripheral diagnostic marker for AD.
- Received February 19, 2002.
- Accepted June 28, 2002.
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- Reply to Letter to the Editor
- Rosanna Squitti, AFaR-Osp. Fatebenefratelli Rome Italy[email protected]
- Domenico Lupoi, Patrizio Pasqualetti, Gloria Dal Fomo, Fabrizio Vemieri, Paola Chiovenda, Luisa Rossi, Maurizio Cortesi, Emanuele Cassetta, and Paolo Maria Rossini
Submitted January 22, 2003 - Elevation of serum copper levels in Alzheimer’s disease
- Steven Brenner, St. Louis VA Medical Center and St. Louis University Medical Center[email protected]
Submitted January 22, 2003
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