Health

Spatial Navigation Issues May Be an Early Alzheimer’s Sign

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Memory loss may not always be the first warning sign for Alzheimer’s disease. A new study suggests that some people who develop Alzheimer’s may struggle with spatial navigation long before they have other telltale symptoms of dementia.

For the study, scientists examined so-called spatial navigation skills — or the ability to recall a route followed before — for 100 cognitively healthy middle aged adults who were at risk for Alzheimer’s disease because of a family history, a genetic predisposition, or lifestyle factors such as a lack of physical activity. Scientists estimated that all the study participants were about 25 years younger than the age when they would be expected to experience the onset of dementia.

To assess spatial navigation skills, researchers had all the participants complete a series of walking tests while wearing virtual reality goggles. First, everyone navigated a path guided by numbered cones to point them in the right direction at each turn. Then, they repeated the task under three different conditions designed to test their navigation skills: a route exactly like the one they saw before, a path with all the textures on the ground replaced by smooth surfaces, and a path without any landmarks to guide their way.

Even though the participants had different reasons for their increased Alzheimer’s risk, they all had similar struggles with spatial navigation during these experiments, according to study results published in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.

“Spatial navigation is one of the earliest cognitive domains to be affected by Alzheimer’s disease,” says Vaisakh Puthusseryppady, PhD, of the spatial neuroscience lab at the University of California in Irvine.

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