Other Headlines

Olga Deshchenko and Heather Mayer brief viewers on this year's AORN conference, which just wrapped up on Thursday.
The DOTmed 100 company has a long tradition in medical technology.
RAND study confirms patients getting inaccurate information on physicians.
Joint venture agreement with Japan's M-Cast, Inc., a subsidiary of leasing giant Mitsubishi UFJ Leasing and Finance.
Matrox Xenia Pro display controller boards now available with WIDE Power-Series diagnostic displays.

Have News for Us?

Submit your news on the industry, people, or companies.

Forward to a Friend

More Industry Headlines

Text of Reconciliation Act Released Act has amendments to Senate health care bill. Read the important highlights.

ECR 2010 Video Profile: Agfa's New Mammography Applications DOTmed News met up with Agfa at ECR 2010 in Vienna to look at two new mammography-focused applications. Watch our video double feature.

Health Care Agency Owner Sentenced to Prison in Medicare Kickback Case Sentence and restitution required.

CBO Releases Reconciliation Act Numbers Coverage in Senate Bill, Reconciliation costs $940 billion, reduces deficit by $138 billion.

ECR Video Profile: Dunlee, Philips Healthcare David Kuehn of Dunlee presents the company's two new products.

Health Care Vote May Come This Weekend Weekend vote is a possibility according to House Majority Leader.

Imaging 100 Preview: The Importance of Banding Together During Health Care Reform Imaging 100 speakers will focus on important health care reform issues.

Congressmen Introduce Bill for Electronic Health Record Interoperability While reform inches along, other legislation progresses.

ECR 2010 Video Profile: Barco DOTmed News stopped by Barco's booth to check out their upcoming medical tablets (developed by FIMI, Barco's recent acquisition) and their latest clinical displays that bring DICOM-compliant viewing outside of the radiologist's office.

CCHIT Comments on ONC's EHR Interim Final Rule The certification organization for electronic health records in the U.S. points out problems in vagueness, complexity of criteria. Also, get a DOTmed exclusive update on CCHIT's testing status.

Neri Kafkafi, PhD

Novel Data Mining Technique Detects Early Signs of Lou Gehrig's Disease

by Astrid Fiano, DOTmed News Writer
A report in the August issue of Behavioral Neuroscience, published by the American Psychological Association, details how "pattern array" software can be used to detect movements in rats which might help predict diseases such as Lou Gehrig's syndrome and other hereditary diseases. This type of data mining may enable testing of therapies to delay or even prevent disease.

The authors of the report demonstrated their original software on mutant rats used as an animal model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), popularly known as Lou Gehrig's disease, after the Yankee great who died in 1941 a progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disease that's inherited about one in 10 times.

Story Continues Below Advertisement
DOTmed Text Ad

Meet Over 100 Directors of Radiology this Spring!

Attend HCP's Radiology & Imaging Conference and "Reverse Trade Show" -- San Diego, CA April 14th to 16th. Meet high-value prospects in a friendly setting. Do more business, make more sales. Call 727-789-9182


Neri Kafkafi, PhD, of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center (University of Maryland's School of Medicine) led the researchers in mathematically analyzing about 50,000 predetermined movement patterns that resulted when rats roamed freely, one by one, in a small arena. The software created an abstract space defined by combinations of behavior such as speed, acceleration and direction of movement. Mining the resulting behavioral data enabled researchers to test many more facets of behavior than they could analyze manually.

Movements of the rats were videotaped in two groups, those with a mutation that results in an ALS-type syndrome and a normal control group. The researchers used the computer to detect differences between the groups and identified a unique motor pattern in mutant rats two months before disease onset (which would equate to roughly five to 10 years in humans).

A significant behavior pattern change was the "heavily braking while slightly turning away from the wall" group difference. In two independent data sets, rats with the ALS-type mutation were significantly less likely than controls to brake and turn from the arena wall as they approached. Normal rats used that behavior for about 1.8 percent of their total movement time; the mutants for 1.2 percent.

"This is a very subtle difference but it is significant," says Kafkafi, in discussing how the subtlety of the movement would be to detect by naked eye. "Persons with emerging ALS may also have similarly subtle symptoms."

"We can only guess why this pattern is less common in the mutants," Kafkafi adds. One possibility is that losing the nerve cells that control leg muscles could result in problems with braking. The team is working with mechanical engineers to learn more about the meaning of the other movements.

Conceivably, by being able to predict more accurately which carriers may express the disease before they experience symptoms (the "premorbid" state), researchers could test medicines that might prevent symptoms from emerging. Kafkafi says, "Such therapies could very well be effective against the non-genetic version of the disease as well."

Methods such as data mining can be therapeutically useful even before science understands how disease begins. The authors wrote, "The discovery of reliable behavioral endpoints with predictive validity, even before a good understanding of their etiology is achieved, can significantly improve intervention research."

Adapted from a press release from the American Psychological Association.

Interested in Medical Industry News? Subscribe to DOTmed's weekly news email and always be informed. Click here, it takes just 30 seconds.

Please Send us your Comments.

Printable Story
Access and use of this site is subject to the terms and conditions of our LEGAL NOTICE & PRIVACY NOTICE
Property of and Proprietary to DOTmed.com, Inc. Copyright ©2001-2010 DOTmed.com, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED