Landmark Book Commemorates Centennial of
Discovery of Alzheimer's DiseaseSource: Case Western
Reserve University
IOS Press is pleased to announce the forthcoming publication
of a landmark work commemorating the centennial of Alois
Alzheimer's discovery of what would be known as Alzheimer's
disease (AD). The book, Alzheimer's Disease: A Century of
Scientific and Clinical Research, is scheduled for publication
in July 2006 and its release will coincide with the 10th
International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease and Related
Disorders, July 15-20 in Madrid.
The centennial of Alois Alzheimer's original description of
the disease that would come to bear his name offers a vantage
point from which to commemorate the seminal discoveries in the
field. This milestone work has been guided by four of the most
prominent voices in the field today, George Perry, Dean of the
University of Texas at San Antonio College of Sciences and
Professor of Pathology and Neurosciences, Case Western Reserve
University, Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Alzheimer's Disease;
Jesús Avila, Center for Molecular Biology, University Autónoma
of Madrid, Senior Editor, Journal of Alzheimer's Disease; June
Kinoshita, Executive Editor, Alzheimer Research Forum; and Mark
A. Smith, Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve
University, Co-Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.
It traces how the true importance of AD as the major cause of
late life dementia ultimately came to light and narrates the
evolution of the concepts related to AD throughout the years
and its recognition as a major public health problem, with an
estimated 30-40 million people affected by AD today.
George Perry commented, "The book will bring to life, and in
many instances revisit and reflect on, the classic studies that
have essentially defined Alzheimer's disease research. My
co-editors and I are extremely pleased that this project has
attracted participation from nearly every single player in the
field and, having read each contribution, I am convinced that
the book is destined to become one of the defining works in the
field."
To identify the breakthroughs, the editors have used
citation analysis, landmark papers identified by current
researchers, and drew upon their own experience and insights.
This process took into account the perspectives of individuals
who recall the impact of findings at the time they were made,
as well as of scientists today who have the advantage of
hindsight in weighing the lasting influence of these findings.
Because modern AD research was triggered by the seminal work of
Tomlinson, Blessed, and Roth some four decades ago, it is
particularly fortunate that the vast majority of these
milestone authors are still with us.
Each contributor was invited to discuss what made his or her
particular article a milestone in the context of its time.
Furthermore, contributors were asked to provide a highly
personal perspective, by recounting the tale of how each
discovery unfolded and by frankly describing the contradictions
among studies and the debates that once took place in whispered
tones in remote corners of seminar rooms and conference
halls.
According to Dr. Perry, "These writings bring to the
practitioner, student and interested lay person a perspective
not only on the past, but also on where the Alzheimer's disease
field is likely to go in the future. Only time will tell
whether these milestones have charted the future accurately,
but they are unquestionably the foundation upon which the
future will be built."
Alzheimer's Disease: A Century of Scientific and Clinical
Research Edited by George Perry, Jesús Avila, June Kinoshita
and Mark A. Smith July 2006, approx. 400 pages, hardcover ISBN:
1-58603-619-x US$150 / €120 / £82 (Will also be published as a
special issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.)
TABLE of CONTENTS
Historical Perspective Jesse F. Ballenger Progress in the
History of Alzheimer's Disease: The Importance of Context
José Manuel Martínez Lage 100 Years of Alzheimer's Disease
(1906-2006)
Neuropathology Melvyn J. Ball The Essential Lesion of
Alzheimer Disease: A Surprise in Retrospect
Heiko Braak, Udo Rüb, Christian Schultz, Kelly Del Tredici
Vulnerability of Cortical Neurons to Alzheimer's and
Parkinson's Diseases
Bernardino Ghetti Neurodegeneration and Hereditary
Dementias: 40 Years of Learning
Asao Hirano and Maki Iida Topographic Study of Alzheimer's
Neurofibrillary Changes: A Personal Perspective
Kurt A. Jellinger Clinicopathological Analysis of Dementia
Disorders in the Elderly - An Update
Michael Kidd The History of the Paired Helical Filaments
Synaptic Changes M.M Esiri and S.A. Chance Vulnerability to
Alzheimer's Pathology in Neocortex: The Roles of Plasticity and
Columnar Organization
Eliezer Masliah, Leslie Crews and Lawrence Hansen Synaptic
Remodeling during Aging and in Alzheimer's Disease
Stephen W. Scheff and Douglas A. Price Alzheimer's
Disease-Related Alterations in Synaptic Density: Neocortex and
Hippocampus
Robert D. Terry My Own Experience in Early Research on
Alzheimer Disease
Amyloid Karen H. Ashe Molecular Basis of Memory Loss in the
Tg2576 Mouse Model of Alzheimer Disease
Massimo Tabaton and Pierluigi Gambetti Soluble Amyloid-ß in
the Brain: The Scarlet Pimpernel
Dora Games, Manuel Buttini, Dione Kobayashi, Dale Schenk and
Peter Seubert Mice as Models: Transgenic Approaches and
Alzheimer's Disease
John Hardy The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis: An update and
Reappraisal
Colin L Masters and Konrad Beyreuther Pathways to the
Discovery of the Aß Amyloid of Alzheimer's Disease
Dennis J. Selkoe Amyloid ß-Peptide Is Produced by Cultured
Cells during Normal Metabolism: A Reprise
Tau Jesús Avila Tau Protein, the Main Component of Paired
Helical Filaments
Jean-Pierre Brion Immunological Demonstration of Tau Protein
in Neurofibrillary Tangles of Alzheimer's Disease
André Delacourte The Natural and Molecular History of
Alzheimer's Disease
Michel Goedert, Aaron Klug and R. Anthony Crowther Tau
Protein, the Paired Helical Filament and Alzheimer's
Disease
Yasuo Ihara Neurofibrillary Tangles/Paired Helical Filaments
(1981-83)
Khalid Iqbal and Inge Grundke-Iqbal Discoveries of Tau,
Abnormally Hyperphosphorylated Tau and Others of
Neurofibrillary Degeneration: A Personal Historical
Perspective
Gail V.W. Johnson Tau Phosphorylation and Proteolysis:
Insights and Perspectives
Kenneth S. Kosik Traveling the Tau Pathway: A Personnel
Account
Virginia M.-Y. Lee and John Q. Trojanowski Progress from
Alzheimer's Tangles to Pathological Tau Points Towards More
Effective Therapies Now
Disease Mechanisms Peter Davies A Long Trek Down the
Pathways of Cell Death in Alzheimer's Disease
Patrick L. McGeer, Joseph Rogers and Edith G. McGeer
Inflammation, Antiinflammatory Agents and Alzheimer Disease:
The Last 12 Years
Ralph A. Nixon and Anne M Cataldo Lysosomal System Pathways:
Genes to Neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's Disease
Daniel P. Perl, Sharon Moalem Aluminum and Alzheimer's
Disease, A Personal Perspective After 25 Years
George Perry When Is the Insoluble Solvable?
Mark A. Smith Oxidative Stress and Iron Imbalance in
Alzheimer Disease: How Rust Became the Fuss!
Akihiko Takashima GSK-3 Is Essential in the Pathogenesis of
Alzheimer's Disease
F.W.van Leeuwen, E.M. Hol and D.F. Fischer Frameshift
Proteins in Alzheimer's Disease and in Other Conformational
Disorders: Time for the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System
Genetics Efrat Levy, Frances Prelli and Blas Frangione
Studies on the First Described Alzheimer's Disease Amyloid ß
Mutant, the Dutch Variant
Alison Goate Segregation of a Missense Mutation in the
Amyloid ß-Protein Precursor Gene with Familial Alzheimer's
Disease
Dmitry Goldgaber The Discovery and Mapping to Chromosome 21
of the Alzheimer Amyloid Gene: My Story
Allen D. Roses On the Discovery of the Genetic Association
of Apolipoprotein E Genotypes and Common Late-Onset Alzheimer
Disease
Gerard D. Schellenberg Early Alzheimer's Disease
Genetics
Maria Grazia Spillantini, Jill R. Murrell, Michel Goedert,
Martin Farlow, Aaron Klug and Bernardino Ghetti Mutations in
the Tau gene (MAPT) in FTDP-17: the family with Multiple System
Tauopathy with Presenile Dementia (MSTD)
Ekaterina Rogaeva, Toshitaka Kawarai and Peter St
George-Hyslop Genetic Complexity of Alzheimer's Disease:
Successes and Challenges
Christine Van Broeckhoven and Samir Kumar-Singh Genetics and
Pathology of Alpha-Secretase Site AßPP Mutations in
Understanding of Alzheimer's Disease
Diagnosis and Treatment Jesse Skoch, Bradley T. Hyman and
Brian J. Bacskai Preclinical Characterization of Amyloid
Imaging Probes with Multiphoton Microscopy
Zaven Khachaturian Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease:
Two-Decades of Progress
Ian G. McKeith Consensus Guidelines for the Clinical and
Pathologic Diagnosis of Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB): Report
of the Consortium on DLB International Workshop
Dave Morgan Immunotherapy for Alzheimer's Disease
Beka Solomon Alzheimer's Disease Immunotherapy: From in
vitro Amyloid Immunomodulation to in vivo Vaccination
William Summers Tacrine and Alzheimer's Treatments
Peter J. Whitehouse Quality of Life: The Bridge from the
Cholinergic Basal Forebrain to Cognitive Science and
Bioethics
About the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease The Journal of
Alzheimer's Disease (www.j-alz.com) is an international
multidisciplinary journal to facilitate progress in
understanding the etiology, pathogenesis, epidemiology,
genetics, behavior, treatment and psychology of Alzheimer's
disease. The journal publishes research reports, reviews, short
communications, book reviews, and letters-to-the-editor. The
journal is dedicated to providing an open forum for original
research that will expedite our fundamental understanding of
Alzheimer's disease.
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