Book contents
- Brain Fables
- Brain Fables
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface 1 – The Question
- Preface 2 – Enter Patient
- Acknowledgements
- Special Thanks from Benjamin Stecher
- Chapter 1 The Shaky Six and the “Second Reality”
- Chapter 2 Pieces of a Puzzle?
- Chapter 3 Disease “Redefinition”: A Tough Pill to Swallow
- Chapter 4 Disease Subtypes: The Promise and the Fallacy
- Chapter 5 Protein Paradox
- Chapter 6 The Fault in Our Models
- Chapter 7 Biomarkers: The Promise and the Fallacy
- Chapter 8 Lessons from Oncology
- Chapter 9 Symptomatic vs. Disease-Modifying Therapies
- Chapter 10 The Hypothesis That Refuses to Die
- Chapter 11 Our Living Dissonance
- Chapter 12 The Scientific and Lay Narratives
- Chapter 13 Challenges Viewed from Afar
- Chapter 14 The Moonshot: Population-Based Studies of Aging
- Chapter 15 Predictions for the 2020s and Beyond
- Epilogue
- Note Added at Press Time – Reviving LOF
- References
- Index
Chapter 5 - Protein Paradox
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 June 2020
- Brain Fables
- Brain Fables
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface 1 – The Question
- Preface 2 – Enter Patient
- Acknowledgements
- Special Thanks from Benjamin Stecher
- Chapter 1 The Shaky Six and the “Second Reality”
- Chapter 2 Pieces of a Puzzle?
- Chapter 3 Disease “Redefinition”: A Tough Pill to Swallow
- Chapter 4 Disease Subtypes: The Promise and the Fallacy
- Chapter 5 Protein Paradox
- Chapter 6 The Fault in Our Models
- Chapter 7 Biomarkers: The Promise and the Fallacy
- Chapter 8 Lessons from Oncology
- Chapter 9 Symptomatic vs. Disease-Modifying Therapies
- Chapter 10 The Hypothesis That Refuses to Die
- Chapter 11 Our Living Dissonance
- Chapter 12 The Scientific and Lay Narratives
- Chapter 13 Challenges Viewed from Afar
- Chapter 14 The Moonshot: Population-Based Studies of Aging
- Chapter 15 Predictions for the 2020s and Beyond
- Epilogue
- Note Added at Press Time – Reviving LOF
- References
- Index
Summary
In Chapter 4 we reviewed the findings of an important study that demonstrated an ostensible paradox: when we divide patients into subtypes, based on mild, intermediate, and “diffuse malignant” levels of severity, the brain pathology at autopsy does not vary between groups in either severity or distribution. In this chapter, we will examine an even more difficult paradox: the proteins that get identified at autopsy to confirm a diagnosis may have nothing to do with why neurons die.
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- Information
- Brain FablesThe Hidden History of Neurodegenerative Diseases and a Blueprint to Conquer Them, pp. 41 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020