On 2015 May 29, Karl Herrup commented:
Shakespeare makes several good points. The tandem article was meant from the beginning as a strong 'counterpoint' to my own article. I find that it is a scholarly and well written piece and I encourage people to read both (especially students).
As for setting the age of onset where sporadic and familial AD diverge, I would have two responses. The first is to thank Dr. Shakespeare for raising the very real point that there is no bright line that separates the two. It is only a question of odds: AD that starts before age 65 is most likely fAD; AD after age 65 is most likely sAD. But "likely" is different from "is". The second response is to confess that I smiled when I saw the comment about how this was an 'unattributed' remark. I too complain about authors who assert that "it is commonly known that...." even when there is little or no primary source offered to back up the point. I have to admit that I was hoisted on my own petard here. I have glanced at the cited reference and am pleased to incorporate its findings in future writings...and to choose my words a bit more precisely.
Concerning my contention that there can be Alzheimer's without plaques. Here Shakespeare actually makes the exact point I was trying to make and I wish I had been clearer. Plaques may well contribute to the disease process and then disappear, which I assert is the message from the vaccine trials. The result is that mechanistically the plaques could have started the disease but then vanish. But given our current approaches, I assert that this is a serious problem. If this individual were to die and his brain come to autopsy, a trained neuropathologist would assure us that the individual's dementia could not possibly have been Alzheimer's, even though it was. I was trying to argue that the implications of this is that we may well distort our findings if we require the presence of plaques to reach a diagnosis of AD. My suggestion is that we should relax our dependence on them, detected through PET scans or neuropathologically, in our diagnostic regimens.
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