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Alzheimer’s Disease

Biomarker testing clarifies brain and vascular health long before symptoms appear, guiding risk recognition for Alzheimer’s disease. At Superpower, we measure homocysteine, vitamin B12, folate, and a lipid profile—markers linked to neuroinflammation, methylation, and cerebrovascular integrity—to illuminate pathways that influence amyloid and tau biology.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

Test for Alzheimer’s Disease
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Key Benefits

  • See how nutrients and blood fats affect brain aging and memory risk.
  • Spot elevated homocysteine linked to cognitive decline and vascular dementia risk.
  • Clarify reversible memory issues from B12 or folate deficiency and anemia.
  • Guide targeted B12/folate therapy to lower homocysteine and support nerve function.
  • Flag lipid patterns that raise stroke and small-vessel disease, worsening cognition.
  • Track response as homocysteine falls with B vitamins and LDL improves with statins.
  • Explain neuropathy, fatigue, or depression that may mimic Alzheimer’s symptoms.
  • Interpret results with CBC, TSH, methylmalonic acid, and your symptoms.

What are Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers are objective signs of the disease’s biology in living people. They mirror the core brain changes that define the disease: buildup of amyloid plaques (amyloid-beta), spread of abnormal tau tangles (phosphorylated tau), and injury and loss of nerve cells (neurodegeneration). These proteins and related signals originate in the brain and can be detected in body fluids and on specialized brain scans, often years before memory problems appear. Biomarker testing turns a clinical suspicion into biology‑based evidence, helping confirm whether Alzheimer’s processes are present, distinguish it from other causes of cognitive decline, and gauge how far the disease has progressed. It also gives a way to monitor the brain’s response to therapy over time. Key readouts include amyloid measures that reflect plaque burden (Aβ), tau markers that track tangle formation and disease activity (p‑tau, total tau), and indicators of neuronal and synaptic damage (neurofilament light, neurogranin), alongside structural changes in the brain (atrophy). In short, biomarkers translate hidden brain pathology into measurable signals that guide diagnosis, prognosis, and care.

Why are Alzheimer’s Disease biomarkers important?

Alzheimer’s Disease biomarkers are measurable signs—from brain proteins to blood chemistry—that show how the brain is handling misfolded proteins, inflammation, energy use, and blood-vessel health. They matter because memory and thinking depend on intact neurons, steady nutrient supply, and clean vascular plumbing; when any of these systems strain, the brain’s resilience drops.

In blood, homocysteine typically sits around 5–15, and brain-friendly patterns tend toward the lower end. Vitamin B12 often spans 200–900, with cognition supported by the middle-to-upper range. Folate commonly runs 3–20, with the middle range adequate for one‑carbon metabolism. For lipids, LDL is often 70–160, HDL 40–60, and triglycerides 50–150; lower LDL and triglycerides with higher HDL generally favor cerebrovascular health.

When these markers fall below range, physiology shifts: low B12 or folate undermines myelin and DNA repair, often raising homocysteine, leading to numbness, imbalance, fatigue, mood changes, and memory lapses (megaloblastic anemia, neuropathy). Very low LDL or triglycerides can reflect poor intake or malabsorption and may compromise membrane and hormone synthesis, sometimes felt as weakness or weight loss. In pregnancy, low folate endangers fetal neural development; in children and teens, B12 deficiency can blunt growth and cognition.

At the high end, elevated homocysteine signals endothelial stress and small‑vessel injury linked to cognitive slowing and depression. High LDL or triglycerides accelerate atherosclerosis and white‑matter damage. Very high B12 can reflect liver or binding‑protein abnormalities; high folate with low B12 may mask anemia while neuropathy progresses. Men tend to have slightly higher homocysteine; after menopause, women’s LDL often rises.

Big picture: these biomarkers complement amyloid and tau by mapping the vascular‑metabolic terrain that shapes brain aging. Patterns favoring efficient methylation and healthy lipids align with better cerebrovascular function and, over time, a lower risk trajectory for cognitive decline.

What Insights Will I Get?

Alzheimer’s disease emerges from intersecting failures in energy production, vascular integrity, immune signaling, and synaptic maintenance. Biomarker testing maps these pathways before symptoms are obvious. At Superpower, we test Homocysteine, B12, Folate, and Lipids to profile one‑carbon metabolism and vascular–metabolic health linked to cognition.

Homocysteine is an intermediate of methylation; higher levels correlate with cognitive decline and vascular injury that amplify amyloid and tau stress. B12 (cobalamin) and Folate (vitamin B9) are cofactors that recycle homocysteine and support DNA synthesis, myelin, and neurotransmitter production; low levels are tied to cognitive impairment and neuropathy. Lipids (LDL, HDL, triglycerides) index lipid transport and vascular risk; dyslipidemia associates with small‑vessel disease, altered amyloid handling, and neuroinflammation.

For stability and healthy function: a balanced homocysteine suggests intact methylation capacity, endothelial health, and resilient neurons; elevations signal oxidative and vascular strain. Adequate B12 and folate indicate sufficient one‑carbon flux for genomic maintenance, myelination, and transmitter balance; insufficiency undermines synaptic stability and raises homocysteine. A favorable lipid profile supports membrane composition, lipid‑raft signaling, and cerebral perfusion; atherogenic patterns indicate cerebrovascular load that can accelerate neurodegeneration.

Notes: Age, kidney function, and thyroid status influence homocysteine. Pregnancy, anemia, and gastric disorders affect B12/folate; metformin, proton‑pump inhibitors, methotrexate, and anticonvulsants can shift levels. Fasting status, acute illness, and inflammation alter lipids; genetics (MTHFR, APOE) modify these pathways. Assay methods vary. These biomarkers inform risk biology but do not diagnose Alzheimer’s disease.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Alzheimer’s Disease

What is Alzheimer’s Disease testing?

Alzheimer’s biomarker testing looks at biological signals linked to brain aging and neurodegeneration. Superpower measures homocysteine, vitamin B12, folate, and a lipid panel. These reflect one‑carbon metabolism and methylation (homocysteine, B12, folate), myelin support (B12, folate), and vascular risk and inflammation (lipids). They do not diagnose Alzheimer’s. They show whether systemic pathways that influence amyloid and tau biology are stressed. Definitive Alzheimer’s biomarkers are amyloid and tau measures (Aβ42/40 ratio, phosphorylated tau) alongside clinical evaluation.

Why should I get Alzheimer’s Disease biomarker testing?

It reveals upstream biology that can accelerate or mimic cognitive decline. Elevated homocysteine and low B12/folate signal impaired methylation and neurotrophic support; adverse lipids indicate atherogenic, inflammatory vascular stress. Together, these pathways influence small‑vessel brain injury and protein handling. Superpower’s homocysteine, B12, folate, and lipid panel provide a baseline to track systemic contributors to brain health. This is complementary to, not a substitute for, Alzheimer’s‑specific amyloid and tau testing and a clinical assessment.

How often should I test?

Use it to establish a baseline and then track trends. Annual testing is reasonable for surveillance of brain‑relevant systemic risk. If results are outside range or there are medication or health status changes, recheck intervals of about 3–6 months are commonly used until stable. Homocysteine and B12/folate respond over weeks to months; lipids often stabilize by 6–12 weeks after changes. Frequency ultimately reflects clinical context; these markers guide risk monitoring, not Alzheimer’s diagnosis.

What can affect biomarker levels?

Age, genetics (e.g., MTHFR variants), kidney function, liver disease, thyroid status, and systemic inflammation can shift values. Medications such as metformin, proton‑pump inhibitors, H2 blockers, antiepileptics, cholestyramine, and high‑dose niacin can lower B12/folate or alter lipids; statins and PCSK9 inhibitors lower LDL‑C. Alcohol intake, diet patterns, weight change, smoking, and physical activity influence homocysteine and lipid fractions. Recent supplements raise B12/folate. Nonfasting status raises triglycerides. Acute illness can transiently alter lipids and homocysteine. Sample handling and biotin can interfere with some immunoassays.

Are there any preparations needed before Alzheimer’s Disease biomarker testing?

Follow your lab’s instructions. If a lipid panel is included, fasting for 8–12 hours is often requested for accurate triglycerides; water is fine. Take usual medications unless your clinician advises otherwise. Avoid high‑dose biotin for 24 hours to reduce assay interference. Avoid taking B12 or folate supplements the morning of the test so serum levels reflect baseline. Inform the lab about recent illness, pregnancy, or transfusions, which can transiently affect results.

Can lifestyle changes affect my biomarker levels?

Yes. Diet patterns and alcohol intake influence triglycerides, LDL‑C, HDL‑C, and homocysteine. Physical activity and weight change shift lipid fractions and inflammatory tone. Smoking raises oxidative stress and homocysteine. Micronutrient intake and absorption affect B12 and folate; gastrointestinal disorders and certain drugs can lower them. Sleep, stress, and acute illness can transiently perturb lipids and homocysteine. These biomarkers reflect whole‑body metabolism and vascular status, which in turn affect brain resilience.

How do I interpret my results?

Compare each result with its reference range and look at the pattern. High homocysteine suggests one‑carbon cycle strain and endothelial stress; low B12 or folate indicates impaired methylation and myelin support; atherogenic lipids (high LDL‑C/non‑HDL‑C, high triglycerides, low HDL‑C) signal vascular and inflammatory risk. Together they describe the vascular‑metabolic milieu that can accelerate neurodegeneration. Normal results do not rule out Alzheimer’s. Abnormal results are risk markers, not a diagnosis. Confirmation of Alzheimer’s relies on disease‑specific biomarkers (Aβ42/40, phosphorylated tau, neurofilament light) and clinical evaluation.

How do I interpret my results?

Compare each result with its reference range and look at the pattern. High homocysteine suggests one‑carbon cycle strain and endothelial stress; low B12 or folate indicates impaired methylation and myelin support; atherogenic lipids (high LDL‑C/non‑HDL‑C, high triglycerides, low HDL‑C) signal vascular and inflammatory risk. Together they describe the vascular‑metabolic milieu that can accelerate neurodegeneration. Normal results do not rule out Alzheimer’s. Abnormal results are risk markers, not a diagnosis. Confirmation of Alzheimer’s relies on disease‑specific biomarkers (Aβ42/40, phosphorylated tau, neurofilament light) and clinical evaluation.

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Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

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Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

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Dr Abe Malkin

Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

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