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  • NARRATION: Some like it plain; others, crunchy.

  • Some add a little jelly,

  • and others like it right out of the jar.

  • But did you know a little dollop of this

  • could be the newest way to detect Alzheimer's disease?

  • JENNIFER STAMPS: My test involves a ruler and

  • some peanut butter, and that's it.

  • NARR: Neuroscientist Jennifer Stamps has found

  • a way to test a person's sense of smell

  • to confirm a diagnosis of Alzheimer's in its early stages.

  • STAMPS: Your olfactory cortex, the part of your brain

  • that processes smell, is the first area of the brain

  • to deteriorate in Alzheimer's.

  • NARR: She says that after ruling out other problems,

  • she can find out if there is a possible problem

  • in the part of the brain that processes smells --

  • in less than two minutes.

  • Here's how it works.

  • STAMPS: I'm going to test your ability to detect an odor.

  • Close your eyes.

  • [patient sniffs, searching for the scent of peanut butter]

  • PATIENT: Yes.

  • NARR: If the left nostril is worse at detecting an odor

  • than the right one by a certain amount,

  • it may be a sign of Alzheimer's.

  • STAMPS: If you're like that different between nostrils,

  • that's pretty normal.

  • I'm talking like this different.

  • NARR: While this is not the first test to use the sense

  • of smell to help diagnose early-stage Alzheimer's,

  • it is in early research --

  • and can be very accurate.

  • STAMPS: The sensitivity is 100 percent in the

  • early Alzheimer's group.

  • NARR: Seems simple, because right now, patients are

  • put through a battery of cognitive tests,

  • physical exams,

  • and imaging.

  • STAMPS: We get a lot of patients in our clinic

  • that have already been told by their geriatrician

  • or another neurologist that they have Alzheimer's.

  • And a lot of times, they don't.

  • They have something very curable,

  • or they're on a bad medication,

  • and I think it would be something that you could

  • easily do in a geriatric practice.

  • That might make you look harder at their lab work.

  • NARR: But why peanut butter?

  • STAMPS: Peanut butter is not a smell typically lost

  • during regular aging.

  • NARR: And even though there's no cure for Alzheimer's,

  • confirming it in its earliest stages

  • could be life-changing.

  • STAMPS: The sooner you slow down the progression,

  • the better, you know? If you start the medication

  • while your memory's still up here instead of

  • waiting for it to get down here,

  • you've saved all that.

  • NARR: Saving memories with a little

  • good old-fashioned peanut butter.

  • This is Inside Science TV.

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NARRATION: Some like it plain; others, crunchy.

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