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kebaldwin
Thu, Mar-02-06, 04:10
Drug Found to Reverse the Ravages of Alzheimer's in Mice

Researchers have identified a compound that could significantly improve treatment of Alzheimer's disease. When administered to mice engineered to develop hallmarks of the disease, the drug reversed cognitive decline and reduced the two types of brain lesions--plaques and tangles--that occur in Alzheimer's patients.

Frank M. LaFerla of the University of California at Irvine and his colleagues gave Alzheimer's mice and normal mice daily doses of the drug, known as AF267B, for eight weeks and then tested their ability to learn to locate a hidden platform in a tank of water. Alzheimer's mice that received AF267B, they found, performed significantly better on this test than untreated mice did. And normal mice showed no ill effects from the drug. But in a second memory test, wherein the animals had to learn to associate a dark chamber with a mild electric shock, the treated Alzheimer's mice did not outperform their untreated counterparts. Subsequent analyses of the brains of these animals revealed that the drug reduced the plaques and tangles in the hippocampus, which is known to play a key role in learning the water maze, but not in the amygdala, which figures importantly in the dark chamber test.

AF267B seems to work in part by enhancing the activity of receptors for the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. The compound binds to these so-called M1 receptors, and in so doing boosts the levels of an enzyme called alpha secretase. This enzyme blocks the production of beta-amyloid proteins, the accumulation of which into plaques is theorized to lead to Alzheimer's. The amygdala, it turns out, does not produce much alpha secretase, and even with the help of AF267B could not make enough to block the formation of beta-amyloid. Hence, the mice's poor performance on the dark chamber task.

The study also suggests that AF267B reduces the activity of an enzyme known as GSK3beta, which in turn prevents so-called tau proteins from clumping together into the disease's signature tangles.

The team additionally found that suppressing the M1 receptors with a drug called dicyclomine exacerbated learning and memory impairment in the Alzheimer's mice, and led to the appearance of more of the plaques and tangles. These results, the scientists say, underscore the important role of M1 receptors in modulating these hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease.

It remains to be seen whether AF267B is as effective in humans suffering from Alzheimer's as it is in the mice. But for their part, LaFerla and his collaborators are hopeful. "AF267B could be a tremendous step forward in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease," LaFerla observes. "Not only does it appear to work on the pathology of Alzheimer's and ease its symptoms, it crosses the blood-brain barrier, which means it does not have to be directly administered to the brain, a significant advantage for a pharmaceutical product. Although we cannot determine what the effects of AF267B will be in humans until clinical trials are complete, we are very excited by the results our study has yielded." The findings will be published tomorrow in the journal Neuron.

http://www.sciam.com/print_version.cfm?articleID=000332CA-2F01-1405-AE5A83414B7F4945

kebaldwin
Thu, Mar-02-06, 04:10
I wonder how this drug compares to the Atkins diet?

Whoa182
Thu, Mar-02-06, 04:30
Low carb and Low cal together has a big effect on Alzheimer's disease
(The low-calorie, low-carb group "almost completely" avoided forming plaque in their brains)
http://www.webmd.com/content/article/99/105216

Fewer calories prevents build up of plaque by 50%
http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/ng.asp?id=56816

high-Fat, Low-Carb Diet May Help Alzheimer's reduces build up by 25%
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,172476,00.html


So looks like doing low carb and Low cal together may work the best! (top link)

Nancy LC
Thu, Mar-02-06, 08:40
There have been a few studies showing Alzheimer's might be a sort of glucose problem in the brain, like a Type 3 diabetes. So I'm not surprised that low carb helps.

Its weird though, I wonder why the brain uses a different area for those two tests?

TBoneMitch
Thu, Mar-02-06, 11:20
Great paper exploring the role of ketones in energy metabolism and their role in helping Alzheimer and Parkinsons diseases:

http://www.waynerad.com/NutritionReviewsKetones.pdf

LilithD
Thu, Mar-02-06, 14:15
"Fewer calories prevents build up of plaque by 50%"

My grandmother was one of those very skinny old ladies who hardly seem to eat anything. I'd be surprised if she wasn't eating 'low calories'. She had terrible alzheimer's that kept her in long and dismal decline for over 15 years.

Duparc
Thu, Mar-02-06, 16:38
Since (if I recall correctly) 1935, considerable sums of money and effort have gone into researching low-calorie diets and as we are aware, this has recently been increased in pace and is now being tested on larger animals (than mice) while low-carbohydrate dieting has been the Ugly Sister and almost ignored. Who then has the courage to admit that science may have been pursuing the wrong objective? While medical science has been stumped at finding a drug cure for those neurological problems, it is pleasing to note that it might just be finding the cause but, will Harvey Banting and his MD get the credit? Doubtful!

Addendum(03.03.06): Just read the articles you introduced WHOa182 and as suspected the reduction of calories to the diet was by reducing the carbs which supports my contention as above. It is the LC diet that is producing the benefits but the calorie-restricted movement is claiming the kudos! Through reducing calories by 30% (standard recommendation) there will be the equal reduction to carbohydrates and hence the claimed benefits of the reduced-calorie scientists. Furthermore, the reduced-calorie movement was hijacked by vegetarians so any reduction to calories would probably come from the carbs. Why don't they just be honest and admit to the beneficial effect of low-carbing?

Turtle2003
Thu, Mar-02-06, 18:02
"AF267B could be a tremendous step forward in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease," LaFerla observes. "Not only does it appear to work on the pathology of Alzheimer's and ease its symptoms, it crosses the blood-brain barrier, which means it does not have to be directly administered to the brain, a significant advantage for a pharmaceutical product.

Gee, ya think? Administering drugs directly into the brain would be a real problem. :lol:

Duparc
Fri, Mar-03-06, 04:02
TBoneMitch That's a fascinating article you introduced and a must for every low-carber to read. In summarising the research that has been done on ketonic diets it shows that Aitkins was well informed in his time. It also explains why a low-carbohydrate diet is not a ketonic diet! To those who haven't read it, it is a bit on the technical side for the lay person but, its general thrust can be followed and answers many questions repeatedly asked on this forum. Many thanks for the reference TBoneMitch!

kebaldwin
Fri, Mar-03-06, 06:01
Duparc - thanks for redirecting me to read that article posted by Tbone.

consumption of relatively small amounts of glucose per day (e.g., 50–75 g) greatly reduces ketone body production.

Dr Atkins always talked about the point at which most people gained or lost weight was around 50 grams of carbs.

A low-carbohydrate diet is not necessarily a ketogenic diet. This is particularly true of diets with unrestricted content of meat and other protein-rich foods.

For every 2 grams of protein consumed in a carbohydrate-free diet, somewhere between 1.0 and 1.2 grams are potentially convertible to glucose.

Therefore, to obtain a degree of hyperketonemia (approximately 2–7 mM/L) believed to be therapeutically effective in certain important medical conditions such as epilepsy, patients must rigorously restrict protein as well as carbohydrate intake37 and, when possible, increase their level of physical activity.

the burden of sustaining life during starvation is shifted from the body’s protein stores to its reserves of fat—a far more effective and efŽ cient adaptation.

demonstrated that mice pups fed a high-fat ketogenic diet exhibited signiŽ cantly increased thresholds against investigator-applied electroshock challenges. This resistance to electroshock disappeared promptly after the animals were shifted to a high-carbohydrate diet

TBoneMitch
Fri, Mar-03-06, 14:25
Thanks, Duparc, I really loved reading that article, it puts quite a few loose ends together...

I advise anybody who wants to learn more about LC and its effects at the neurological level should read this paper.

What is mind-boggling is when some dieteticians claim that no studies have been done on low carb, as some of the references in the cited paper date to the 1920s.

The Low Carb diet is the medical community's best kept secret.

Duparc
Fri, Mar-03-06, 15:25
Your comment reminds me too that coconut cures influenza (and olive leaf extract too) but what medic is likely to know that, even though the discovery came from medical research years ago!