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Posted

Brain Exercise Can Enhance Memory, Thinking, In Older Adults

 

ScienceDaily (Nov. 20, 2007) — Doing the right kind of brain exercise can enhance memory and other cognitive abilities of older adults, according to new research.

 

 

Dr. Elizabeth Zelinski of the University of Southern California Andrus Gerontology Center presented data* from the IMPACT study (Improvement in Memory with Plasticity-based Adaptive Cognitive Training) – the largest study ever done on aging and cognitive training using a program available to the public.

Brain Exercise Can Enhance Memory, Thinking, In Older Adults

Posted
Alzheimer's Treatment: 'Cocktail' Of Compounds Improves Brain Function In Rodents

 

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2007) — MIT researchers have shown that a cocktail containing three compounds normally in the blood stream promotes growth of new brain connections and improves cognitive function in rodents.

. . .

In the Brain Research paper, the MIT team reported that rodents given a cocktail of DHA (a type of omega-3 fatty acid), uridine and choline showed a greatly increased concentration of dendritic spines, which receive messages in the postsynaptic neuron. That indicates that synapse regeneration has occurred, which is unusual, Wurtman said.

 

Synapse regrowth could also prove an effective treatment for other brain diseases, such as Parkinson's, or for brain injuries, he said.

 

The researchers found that rodents who received the treatment performed much better on tests of cognitive ability

Alzheimer's Treatment: 'Cocktail' Of Compounds Improves Brain Function In Rodents

High Blood Pressure May Heighten Effects Of Alzheimer's Disease

 

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2007) — Having hypertension, or high blood pressure, reduces blood flow in the brains of adults with Alzheimer's disease, according to a new study presented today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.

High Blood Pressure May Heighten Effects Of Alzheimer's Disease

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Why fish oil is good for you

 

UCLA researchers find anti-Alzheimer's mechanism in omega-3 fatty acids

 

It's good news that we are living longer, but bad news that the longer we live, the better our odds of developing late-onset Alzheimer's disease.

 

Many Alzheimer's researchers have long touted fish oil, by pill or diet, as an accessible and inexpensive "weapon" that may delay or prevent this debilitating disease. Now, UCLA scientists have confirmed that fish oil is indeed a deterrent against Alzheimer's, and they have identified the reasons why.

 

Reporting in the current issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, now online, Greg Cole, professor of medicine and neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and associate director of UCLA's Alzheimer Disease Research Center, and his colleagues report that the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) found in fish oil increases the production of LR11, a protein that is found at reduced levels in Alzheimer's patients and which is known to destroy the protein that forms the "plaques" associated with the disease.

 

The plaques are deposits of a protein called beta amyloid that is thought to be toxic to neurons in the brain, leading to Alzheimer's. Since having high levels of LR11 prevents the toxic plaques from being made, low levels in patients are believed to be a factor in causing the disease.

 

Alzheimer's is a debilitating neurodegenerative disease that causes memory loss, dementia, personality change and ultimately death. The national Alzheimer's Association estimates that 5.1 million Americans are currently afflicted with the disease and predicts that the number may increase to between 11 million and 16 million people by the year 2050.

 

The researchers examined the effects of fish oil, or its component DHA, in multiple biological systems and administered the oil or fatty acid by diet and by adding it directly to neurons grown in the laboratory.

 

"We found that even low doses of DHA increased the levels of LR11 in rat neurons, while dietary DHA increased LR11 in brains of rats or older mice that had been genetically altered to develop Alzheimer's disease," said Cole, who is also associate director of the Geriatric Research Center at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

 

To show that the benefits of DHA were not limited to nonhuman animal cells, the researchers also confirmed a direct impact of DHA on human neuronal cells in culture as well. Thus, high levels of DHA leading to abundant LR11 seem to protect against Alzheimer's, Cole said, while low LR11 levels lead to formation of the amyloid plaques.

 

Fish oil and its key ingredient, omega-3 fatty acids (found in fatty fish like salmon), have been a mainstay of alternative health practitioners for years and have been endorsed by the American Heart Association to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease.

 

Fatty acids like DHA are considered "essential" fatty acids because the body cannot make them from other sources and must obtain them through diet. Years of research have shown that DHA is the most abundant essential fatty acid in the brain, Cole said, and that it is critical to fetal and infant brain development. Studies have also linked low levels of DHA in the brain to cognitive impairment and have shown that lower levels may increase oxidative stress in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.

 

Based on the positive results, the National Institutes of Health is currently conducting a large-scale clinical trial with DHA in patients with established Alzheimer's disease. For those patients, Cole said, it may be too late in the disease's progression for DHA to have much effect. But he is hopeful that the NIH will conduct a large-scale prevention clinical trial using fish oil at the earliest stages of the disease — particularly because it is unlikely that a pharmaceutical company will do so, since fish oil in pill form is readily available and inexpensive.

 

Still to be determined, he said, "is what the optimal dose should be. It could be that a smaller amount might be helpful, especially in a place like the south of France, where people are already on a Mediterranean diet."

 

Here in the United States, though, where fish consumption is not very high, the dose may need to be higher.

 

"There's a deficiency of DHA to begin with," Cole said, "and this may contribute to the low LR11 seen in many Alzheimer's patients."

 

In addition to Cole, authors included Qui-Lan Ma, Bruce Teter, Oliver J. Ubede, Takashi Morihara, Dilsher Dhoot, Michael D. Nyby, Michael L. Tuck and Sally A. Frautschy, all of UCLA.

 

Funding for the research was provided by a grant from the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. The research was initiated with support from the National Institute on Aging.

 

The UCLA Department of Neurology encompasses more than a dozen research, clinical and teaching programs. These programs cover brain mapping and neuro-imaging, movement disorders, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, neurogenetics, nerve and muscle disorders, epilepsy, neuro-oncology, neurotology, neuropsychology, headaches and migraines, neurorehabilitation, and neurovascular disorders. The department ranked No. 1 in 2005 and 2006 among its peers nationwide in National Institutes of Health funding.

 

For more information, visit UCLA Neurology.

Posted

My daughter told me yesterday that Terry Prattchett may have Alheimers :edevil:

 

That is terrible, if true. He has a beautiful, creative (to the power of 10) mind. He is my favourite author. I go back and read and re-read his books always discovering new things.

I have only ever read one other fiction book more then once (Lord of the Rings)

 

Hazel Hawke, sharp, intelligent, generous ex- wife of our ex-prime minister also has Alzyheimers

Posted

Cystatin C may help treat Alzheimer's

 

NEW YORK, Nov. 19 (UPI) -- Amyloid beta plaques, a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, can be prevented by interacting with the protein cystatin C, U.S. and German researchers have found.

 

Lead author Efrat Levy of the New York University School of Medicine said two animal studies may open the door to new treatments for Alzheimer's disease that mimic the effects of cystatin C.

 

The first study, by Levy and researchers at the Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research and New York University School of Medicine, and the second study with Levy and colleagues in the laboratory of Dr. Mathias Jucker at the Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research in Tubingen, Germany, used genetically engineered mice to produce human cystatin C and abundant amounts of amyloid beta plaques in their brains.

 

The protein cystatin C bound to the soluble, non-pathological form of amyloid beta in these mice, and inhibited the aggregation and deposition of amyloid beta plaques in the brain, Levy said.

 

Both studies are published online in advance of the December print issue of the journal Nature Genetics.

Posted

Now this bastard of a disease is getting personal.

What can be done?

More money for research?

 

Why does it attack such intelligent vibrant people with so much to offer the world?

Terry Pratchett has more ideas and more weird neuron connections to bizarre useless information than anyone on this planet.

He is a most neglected and undervalued writer even if he sells more books than anyone else he is still stupidly seen as a cult thing.

He has created his own unique and wonderful "genre" and people can't put him in a box.

BUT THIS IS TERRIBLE

*** Discworld Monthly ***

*** Issue 129: January 2008 ***

 

Table of Contents:

 

1. Editorial

2. News

3. Readers' Letters

4. DiscTrivia

5. Review: Hogswatch Event 2007

6. Competitions

7. Review: Guards! Guards! 24th November 2007

8. The End

--------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Editorial

 

Welcome to issue 129 and the start of a shiny new year. Unless you

live on another planet you can't have missed the news that Terry has

been diagnosed as having a rare form of early onset Alzheimers.

Below is what Terry wrote about it on 11th December 2007.

 

 

AN EMBUGGERANCE

 

Folks,

 

I would have liked to keep this one quiet for a little while, but

because of upcoming conventions and of course the need to keep my

publishers informed, it seems to me unfair to withhold the news. I

have been diagnosed with a very rare form of early onset

Alzheimer's, which lay behind this year's phantom "stroke".

 

We are taking it fairly philosophically down here and possibly with

a mild optimism. For now work is continuing on the completion of

Nation and the basic notes are already being laid down for Unseen

Academicals. All other things being equal, I expect to meet most

current and, as far as possible, future commitments but will discuss

things with the various organisers. Frankly, I would prefer it if

people kept things cheerful, because I think there's time for at

least a few more books yet :shrug:)

 

 

PS I would just like to draw attention to everyone reading the

above that this should be interpreted as 'I am not dead'. I will,

of course, be dead at some future point, as will everybody else.

For me, this maybe further off than you think - it's too soon to

tell. I know it's a very human thing to say "Is there anything I can

do", but in this case I would only entertain offers from very

high-end experts in brain chemistry.

 

 

Then due to the high amount of traffic he was receiving he updated

the news with the following on the 12th December.

 

AN UPDATE

 

Folks,

 

My good friend Sandra Kidby of PJSM Prints

[http://www.pjsmprints.co.uk] is allowing me to use her website

because I am proverbially too busy to run one of my own. We have

hardly the time even to read the thousands of messages that have

come in here, let alone reply to them, but thank you all.

 

Could I make a small comment, however? Lots of people are sending

me plot ideas. Please, I have a lot of ideas. There is no shortage

of ideas and ideas sent to me, even with the very best of

intentions, are carefully filleted out of the correspondence before

they even get to me. I know they are sent in an effort to help, and

I appreciate this, but I advise you not to waste your time.

 

I am also getting a lot of requests for interviews. I am not giving

any because everything I have got to say or that can be said is in

the bulletin below. There is no point in saying it again, but in a

different order.

 

Can I remind everybody that I still aten’t dead, even today.

 

Thanks again for all your good wishes.

 

 

Discworld Monthly of course wishes Terry all the best and hopes that

the world will soon leave him alone a bit so that he can get on with

what he enjoys doing most which is writing books

The following information is a reminder of your current mailing

list subscription:

 

You are subscribed to the following list:

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using the following email:

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

 

You may automatically unsubscribe from this list at any time by

visiting the following URL:

 

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If the above URL is inoperable, make sure that you have copied the

entire address. Some mail readers will wrap a long URL and thus break

this automatic unsubscribe mechanism.

 

You may also change your subscription by visiting this list's main screen:

 

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The following physical address is associated with this mailing list:

 

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Posted
Latest Programs

Monday 31 December 2007

 

Listen Now - 31122007 | Download Audio - 31122007

Alzheimer's, testosterone and the ageing brain

 

Boosting levels of testosterone in the body can reduce levels of the protein beta amyloid in the brain, one of the key players in causing Alzheimer's disease, according to a recent breakthrough in Australian research. Read Transcript

The Health Report

Some interesting long-term research projects starting in Australia.

Professor for Ageing and Alzheimer's disease at Edith Cowan University are excited about their latest study. It's showing a strong link between the male sex hormone testosterone and Alzheimer's disease.

. . .

. . .

One of the things that is quite clear is that obesity is a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease and obesity also results in a reduction of testosterone levels.

******************************

Now meet Joan Mann, who's a volunteer in a large study set up to help us understand what happens when we age.

 

Joan Mann: Well I'm a widow, I will be 80 next birthday.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Reversal Of Alzheimer's Symptoms Within Minutes In Human Study

 

An extraordinary new scientific study, which for the first time documents marked improvement in Alzheimer’s disease within minutes of administration of a therapeutic molecule, has just been published in the Journal of Neuroinflammation.

 

This new study highlights the importance of certain soluble proteins, called cytokines, in Alzheimer’s disease. The study focuses on one of these cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha(TNF), a critical component of the brain’s immune system. Normally, TNF finely regulates the transmission of neural impulses in the brain. The authors hypothesized that elevated levels of TNF in Alzheimer’s disease interfere with this regulation. To reduce elevated TNF, the authors gave patients an injection of an anti-TNF therapeutic called etanercept. Excess TNF-alpha has been documented in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with Alzheimer’s.

Posted
Just listened to this

Health Report - 21 May 2007 - Alzheimer's, testosterone and the ageing brain

Big study being done in Australia.

Diet is part of it.

It only stays podcast on the site for four weeks.

If I can workout how to download and upload it I will attach it to this post (big ask)

Well worth a listen.

Alzheimer's, testosterone and the ageing brain

Boosting levels of testosterone in the body can reduce levels of the protein beta amyloid in the brain, one of the key players in causing Alzheimer's disease, according to a recent breakthrough in Australian research.

 

--This may actually support my theory....

Low ambient level testosterone people are more likely to "ponder" upon daily dealings of emotions. -I say ambient, because the opposite effect can occur when either + or - ive swings of Testosterone levels occur (--usually based on the persons actually brain state at the time of the swing ---> so artificially trying to swing the levels may not achieve the desired effect) ,, ie If a person has programmed themselves to ponder, than getting rid of such a childhood nuance from thier current state is near on impossible without MORE pondering.

--ie, to get alleviate the process that has cuased the databank detriment, you need to instances the process that caused. The only tweak that you have to add to the new instance is to 'not' store emotion.

 

Linux Talk:

--it's about Killing a Daemon process, specifically the "Data Delegation System"

and typing

>/etc/rc.3/Data Delegation System --What's Now not Past not Present --restart

or more likely what's neede in human terms, yet still in Lunix speak

 

>/etc/rc.1/Epiphany --reload and get intouch with

>/etc/rc.1/Logic --add data < Epiphany Fart Data (Aurora northern Lights style input)

>/etc/rc.1/Logic -- link --> Epihany, --start

>/etc/rc.2/Standard Worker Process --restart (citing previous epiphany, within each task in higher lever init's) , ie that is to say the Epiphany must be remmeber and not just shoveled into another memory bank... it must spread like a virus throughout the Standar Worker Processes of the daily living of the being.

>/etc/rc.3/Data Delegation System --rememeber epihapny, spread to other thoughts/algortihms and link to the reasoning Deamon. Let the reasoning Deamon know that you will not be stroing memory about emotion any longer and can now work on the epiphany data.

 

 

.... so how could this be done

 

--ECT seems to be one option... after a course of ECT the mind has a window to start Anew with it's Daemons... sadly most of the time this isn't the case. - environment would be a crucial issue after the ECT ....

 

however unorthodox, and probably unethical...

 

Grab the person... start them off by suggestive Memory maps.... you need to give them time to start typing in the commands to A. Kill the Data Delegation Daemon, B. when re-invoked, to not bother with emotion, and re-instance the Reasoning Daemeon with new Epiphany Data.

 

Techniques include talking about the possibility of Learning the Piano. - Do all the subconscience mumbo with the patient - ie. actually let them pass by a Piano accidentally.

Do all paper work around them in yellow.

When you feel that the subconscience has taken on the algrotithm your trying to setup... wait, then start ECT (maybe 3months after)

 

ECT -- do it, and keep the person in a state of stupor (via drugs, not ECT!!)

in the stupor state instantiate the paper work, and the piano... constant piano playing comes to mind, with yellow scores.

 

Awaken the person... take away the vectors that started the knew logical layer thought process.... make sure NO thoughts about emotional state are instantiated (of course need I remind that during ECT you are to treat the person like a number, so that they finally "get it" --if they seem emotionalduring the stupor state, than nothing you do durin awakening will help)

 

Note: Awakening is the process of starting from rc.0 ..1. 2. etc (Lunix Speak)

 

Now...you have to get them to actually start thier new hobby (the piano)... the reasoning process needs a new avenue to amuse itself. ie. before it was good at reasoning emotion, now it needs to reason why Beethoven was still able to listen deaf.

 

-the Logic Layer... it's not good enough to flood the system with Piano data... the Data Delegation system is already exhausted. In other words, rope learning the piano won't work (neither will tutoring --to much possibility of starting up emotion reasoning again 00 remeber that the reasoning Daemon asks the Data Delegation System for input.), so the learning has to be Autonomous, the reasoning Daemon must be called by the Data Delegation layer that is taking care of desire.

 

So things to take from this convoluted theory...

 

Thier is no emotion (just like a computer) ... thier are only a bunch of Algorithms, that can only work at certain rates (threading/mutiprocessing is limited by physics of the mind -- and the PC!)

 

The only emotion that we "feel" is that of the Mind getting "hot or cold" , like a CPU gets hot or cold... but in the mind's case it's the chemical resovoir that is the skull that causes these states.... eg. Alchol is like water to the CPU (if the cpu were to say made out of vacuum tubes and not sealed) - difference with the human mind is that little robots come and fix things (to an extent), Sadly the only way to fix things of the mind is to re-work the algorithms. -which maybe impossible if you haven't the source code.

 

--The rantings of a geek watching SBS Weather.

Posted
Just listened to this

Health Report - 21 May 2007 - Alzheimer's, testosterone and the ageing brain

Big study being done in Australia.

Diet is part of it.

It only stays podcast on the site for four weeks.

If I can workout how to download and upload it I will attach it to this post (big ask)

Well worth a listen.

Alzheimer's, testosterone and the ageing brain

Boosting levels of testosterone in the body can reduce levels of the protein beta amyloid in the brain, one of the key players in causing Alzheimer's disease, according to a recent breakthrough in Australian research.

 

--This may actually support my theory....

Low ambient level testosterone people are more likely to "ponder" upon daily dealings of emotions. -I say ambient, because the opposite effect can occur when either + or - ive swings of Testosterone levels occur (--usually based on the persons actually brain state at the time of the swing ---> so artificially trying to swing the levels may not achieve the desired effect) ,, ie If a person has programmed themselves to ponder, than getting rid of such a childhood nuance from thier current state is near on impossible without MORE pondering.

--ie, to get alleviate the process that has cuased the databank detriment, you need to instances the process that caused. The only tweak that you have to add to the new instance is to 'not' store emotion.

 

Linux Talk:

--it's about Killing a Daemon process, specifically the "Data Delegation System"

and typing

>/etc/rc.3/Data Delegation System --What's Now not Past not Present --restart

or more likely what's neede in human terms, yet still in Lunix speak

 

>/etc/rc.1/Epiphany --reload and get intouch with

>/etc/rc.1/Logic --add data < Epiphany Fart Data (Aurora northern Lights style input)

>/etc/rc.1/Logic -- link --> Epihany, --start

>/etc/rc.2/Standard Worker Process --restart (citing previous epiphany, within each task in higher lever init's) , ie that is to say the Epiphany must be remmeber and not just shoveled into another memory bank... it must spread like a virus throughout the Standar Worker Processes of the daily living of the being.

>/etc/rc.3/Data Delegation System --rememeber epihapny, spread to other thoughts/algortihms and link to the reasoning Deamon. Let the reasoning Deamon know that you will not be stroing memory about emotion any longer and can now work on the epiphany data.

 

 

.... so how could this be done

 

--ECT seems to be one option... after a course of ECT the mind has a window to start Anew with it's Daemons... sadly most of the time this isn't the case. - environment would be a crucial issue after the ECT ....

 

however unorthodox, and probably unethical...

 

Grab the person... start them off by suggestive Memory maps.... you need to give them time to start typing in the commands to A. Kill the Data Delegation Daemon, B. when re-invoked, to not bother with emotion, and re-instance the Reasoning Daemeon with new Epiphany Data.

 

Techniques include talking about the possibility of Learning the Piano. - Do all the subconscience mumbo with the patient - ie. actually let them pass by a Piano accidentally.

Do all paper work around them in yellow.

When you feel that the subconscience has taken on the algrotithm your trying to setup... wait, then start ECT (maybe 3months after)

 

ECT -- do it, and keep the person in a state of stupor (via drugs, not ECT!!)

in the stupor state instantiate the paper work, and the piano... constant piano playing comes to mind, with yellow scores.

 

Awaken the person... take away the vectors that started the knew logical layer thought process.... make sure NO thoughts about emotional state are instantiated (of course need I remind that during ECT you are to treat the person like a number, so that they finally "get it" --if they seem emotionalduring the stupor state, than nothing you do durin awakening will help)

 

Note: Awakening is the process of starting from rc.0 ..1. 2. etc (Lunix Speak)

 

Now...you have to get them to actually start thier new hobby (the piano)... the reasoning process needs a new avenue to amuse itself. ie. before it was good at reasoning emotion, now it needs to reason why Beethoven was still able to listen deaf.

 

-the Logic Layer... it's not good enough to flood the system with Piano data... the Data Delegation system is already exhausted. In other words, rope learning the piano won't work (neither will tutoring --to much possibility of starting up emotion reasoning again 00 remeber that the reasoning Daemon asks the Data Delegation System for input.), so the learning has to be Autonomous, the reasoning Daemon must be called by the Data Delegation layer that is taking care of desire.

 

So things to take from this convoluted theory...

 

Thier is no emotion (just like a computer) ... thier are only a bunch of Algorithms, that can only work at certain rates (threading/mutiprocessing is limited by physics of the mind -- and the PC!)

 

The only emotion that we "feel" is that of the Mind getting "hot or cold" , like a CPU gets hot or cold... but in the mind's case it's the chemical resovoir that is the skull that causes these states.... eg. Alchol is like water to the CPU (if the cpu were to say made out of vacuum tubes and not sealed) - difference with the human mind is that little robots come and fix things (to an extent), Sadly the only way to fix things of the mind is to re-work the algorithms. -which maybe impossible if you haven't the source code.

 

--The rantings of a geek watching SBS Weather.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
After Terry's announcement last month about his illness and the

subsequent flood of mail, he has provided another update on Sandra

Kidby's website (Terry Pratchett / Paul Kidby Discworld Artwork by Paul Kidby). I have reproduced

Terry's response below:

 

 

Folks,

 

We have had many tens of thousands of e-mails from people and the

letter flood is just beginning to bite (hilariously, spam traps

here tend to pick up things like 'medication' and treat quite a

lot of the mail as spam. If we switch them off, we get all the

spam too - hurrah!). All this good will is appreciated, although

there is no way on gods earth that I will be able to reply to even

a fraction of you. I would like people to bear in mind that I

have been diagnosed quite early after an MRI scan and a whole

afternoon of tests. While nothing is certain, one does not have

to be unduly optimistic to believe that I will be around and,

hopefully, working for some time to come. My advice, therefore,

is to calm down and await events. I have not actually gone, yet.

 

As an aside, thanks to everyone who bought Making Money making it,

we understand, the best selling hardback fiction of 2007. At

least that's what the figures say. It will be interesting to see

if the papers say it too.

 

Happy Hogswatch!

from *** Discworld Monthly ***

*** Issue 130: February 2008 ***

<http://www.oook.org.uk/dwm/mail.cgi/u/dwm/>

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
East meets West in the search for Alzheimer's therapeutics - novel dimeric inhibitors from tacrine and huperzine A.

 

Li WM, Kan KK, Carlier PR, Pang YP, Han YF.

 

Department of Biochemistry, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China.

 

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is linked to cholinergic deficiency and the overactivation of glutamate receptors. The acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibition treatment approach has produced the most encouraging results in clinical practice, and memantine, a moderate antagonist of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, has been approved for treating AD. However, AChE inhibitors have limited success as they only improve memory in mild dementia but cannot stop the process of neurodegeneration; while memantine possesses neuroprotective effects only with a little ability in memory enhancement.

There has been a major rush among neuroscience research institutions and pharmaceutical firms worldwide to search for safer and more effective therapeutic agents for AD.

The novel dimers, derived from tacrine and the fragment of huperzine A (HA'), have been demonstrated to be potent and selective reversible inhibitors of AChE. Bis(7)-tacrine, bis(12)-hupyridone (E12E) and HA'(10)-tacrine, are representatives of three series of novel dimers. According to the preclinical studies, these compounds have been shown to have low toxicity and high efficacy for improving cognitive deficits in several animal models.

More interestingly, bis(7)-tacrine, similar to memantine, prevents glutamate-induced neurotoxicity by moderately blocking glutamate receptor NMDA subtype. Furthermore, bis(7)-tacrine, as well as E12E, possesses multiple neuroprotective effects in vitro and in vivo. Taking together, these dimeric AChE inhibitors, especially bis(7)-tacrine, E12E and HA'(10)-tacrine, may provide beneficial effects in AD and other neurodegenerative diseases.

 

 

 

PMID: 17908041 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

East meets West in the search for Alzheimer's ther...[Curr Alzheimer Res. 2007] - PubMed Result

Studies also suggest that donepezil may help improve behavior and memory in patients with moderate-to-severe Alzheimer’s when it is given in combination with memantine (Namenda)

.

Alzheimer's Disease Medications - Alzheimer's Disease Health Information - NY Times Health

Herbs and Dietary Supplements

 

Manufacturers of herbal remedies and dietary supplements do not need FDA approval to sell their products. Just like a drug, herbs and supplements can affect the body's chemistry, and therefore have the potential to produce side effects that may be harmful.

There have been several reported cases of serious and even lethal side effects from herbal products. Always check with your doctor before using any herbal remedy or dietary supplement.

 

Ginkgo Biloba. Ginkgo biloba is a common herb that has antioxidant properties and appears to increase blood flow to the brain. A 2002 study of healthy people who took over-the-counter ginkgo for 6 weeks reported no improvements in memory or mental function.

Studies are reporting that a ginkgo biloba extract, called Egb 761, may slightly improve the memory of patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. The herb poses a small increased risk for bleeding, which may be hazardous in combination with other blood-thinning medications, such as warfarin or high-doses of vitamin E.

 

Turmeric. Studies suggest that circumin, a compound found in the spice turmeric, has properties that may protect against the Alzheimer's disease process.

 

Melatonin. Melatonin, a natural hormone involved in sleep regulation, is of interest to researchers. It is an antioxidant, may break down beta amyloid, and is able to pass through the blood-brain barrier. Deficiencies have been observed in patients with Alzheimer's disease. A number of studies (but not all) report that melatonin may improve sleep habits in these patients. Some studies reported slower progression of mental impairment.

Alzheimer's Disease Medications - Alzheimer's Disease Health Information - NY Times Health

 

From left field:-

lots of other things potentiate opiates. antideppressants are notorious. the obvious **** like alcohol and benzo,s ( seems like most OD,s are associated with these, I know mine was.) cats claw herb, and a host of other herbs most likely......memantine, TAGAMET.

Potentiators... - Opiophile.org

Memantine is not available in the US at this time. It is in stage 3 trials for Alzheimer’s disease. US approval may come within the next 2 years. Memantine is now approved in the European Union for the treatment of Alzheimer’s.

It has been marketed in Germany since 1978 for the treatment of dementia and other cognitive disorders.

It comes in 10mg tablets. One or two tablets/day are sufficient to prevent opiate/amphetamine tolerance, overactivity of the NMDA receptor and consequent free radical stress inside the neuron. The most expensive option though.

See above link.

 

More info here:-

Alzheimer's disease

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted
Anti-Alzheimer's Mechanism In Omega-3 Fatty Acids Found

 

ScienceDaily (Jan. 2, 2008) — It's good news that we are living longer, but bad news that the longer we live, the better our odds of developing late-onset Alzheimer's disease.

 

Many Alzheimer's researchers have long touted fish oil, by pill or diet, as an accessible and inexpensive "weapon" that may delay or prevent this debilitating disease. Now, UCLA scientists have confirmed that fish oil is indeed a deterrent against Alzheimer's, and they have identified the reasons why.

Anti-Alzheimer's Mechanism In Omega-3 Fatty Acids Found

A pity fish is full of lead, mercury PCBs DDT etc

  • 1 month later...
Posted
Mr Pratchett says:

 

"Part of me lives in a world of new age remedies and science, and

some of the science is a little like voodoo, but science was never

an exact science, and personally I'd eat the arse out of a dead mole

if it offered a fighting chance."

 

On the issue of raising awareness of dementia and the urgent need

for more research, the author added: "I intend to scream and

harangue while there is time."

In the unlikely event that you missed the news this month, Terry has

personally donated 1 million USD to Alzheimers Research UK. More

information about this is included in the news section.

 

Various fans felt it would be good to "Match it for Pratchett", so

if you wish to make a small donation why don't we see if we can

(collectively) match Terry's contribution.

All from the discworld monthly newsletter

 

<http://www.oook.org.uk/dwm/mail.cgi/list/dwm>

?

 

Donations for research in Australia can be made here

Alzheimers Australia

In the UK, here:-

Alzheimer's Research Trust - Alzheimer's Research Trust

In the USA?

Posted

Exercise may be the simple, most effective treatment at the moment:

 

Mounting evidence suggests that physical activity may have benefits beyond a healthy heart and body weight. Through the past several years, population studies have suggested that exercise which raises your heart rate for at least 30 minutes several times a week can lower your risk of Alzheimer's. Physical activity appears to inhibit Alzheimer's-like brain changes in mice, slowing the development of a key feature of the disease.

 

In one observational study, investigators looked at the relationship of physical activity and mental function in about 6,000 women age 65 and older, over an 8 year period. They found that the women who were more physically active were less likely to experience a decline in their mental function than inactive women.

 

Another compelling study, conducted by researchers at the University of Chicago, was highlighted on ABC News last week. The study used mice bred to develop Alzheimer's type plaque in the brain. In the study, some mice were allowed to exercise and others were not. The brains in the physically active mice had 50 to 80 percent less plaque than the brains of the sedentary mice and they (exercising mice) produced significantly more of an enzyme in the brain that prevents plaque.

 

 

Preventing Alzheimer's: Exercise still best bet - MayoClinic.com

Posted

I wonder if this research would have benefits for brain disorders like Alzheimer's?

Results

 

We determined that human umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells (UCBMC) given peripherally, by an intravenous injection, could rejuvenate the proliferative activity of the aged neural stem/progenitor cells. This increase in proliferation lasted for at least 15 days after the delivery of the UCBMC.

Along with the increase in proliferation following UCBMC treatment, an increase in neurogenesis was also found in the aged animals.

. . .

Conclusion

 

The results demonstrate that a single intravenous injection of UCBMC in aged rats can significantly improve the microenvironment of the aged hippocampus and rejuvenate the aged neural stem/progenitor cells.

Our results raise the possibility of a peripherally administered cell therapy as an effective approach to improve the microenvironment of the aged brain.

BioMed Central | Full text | Peripheral injection of human umbilical cord blood stimulates neurogenesis in the aged rat brain

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