Two research teams have published two studies using a modern technique called optical vesectomy, to detect changes in the blood vessels in the eye that help early diagnosis of Alzheimer's before its symptoms. Is it the fastest and least expensive technique to detect it?

Alzheimer's disease causes a gradual loss of memory. For years, doctors missed a practical way to reveal it. However, two research teams at the 122nd annual conference of the American Academy of Ophthalmology conducted two studies that revealed changes in the blood vessels in the eye that indicate Alzheimer's disease before its symptoms. The disease.

In the two studies, optical imaging techniques are called optical fiber optics, which use optical waves to depict the retina in transverse sections, a non-invasive process that does not take more than 30 seconds, but provides researchers with a detailed view of the most accurate veins in the eye. Researchers from Duke University compared surveys of healthy people with surveys of people with Alzheimer's disease or those with impaired cognitive abilities, noting that surveys of patients with the disease showed the loss of small blood vessels in the retina and grafting into a particular layer of their layers. Researchers at the Chiba Medical Center used another approach to their study. They compared surveys of people with pre-existing disease in the family, but the symptoms have yet to appear, with those who have no previous disease in the family. Their surveys revealed that the inner layer of the retina is less dense in the first group. Expensive brain imaging devices and spinal cerebral palsy are the best available tools for early detection of Alzheimer's disease. Early treatments often give effective results, which means that early diagnosis is key to victory in battle with the disease. According to the study results, eye scans may be the fastest and least expensive technique for detecting the disease, which everyone is looking for.