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Alzheimer's: Why Aren't We Stopping It?
by: Barbara Morris, R.Ph.
In 2005 the Alzheimer's Association (AA) awarded 92 grants totaling $17.8 million, pushing the Association's
funding for Alzheimer's Disease (AD) research since
1982 to over $185 million.
Of the 92 grants, just one went to the study of a
nutritional supplement. The grant title: "Randomized
Trial of a Nutritional Supplement to Reduce the Risk of
Alzheimer's Disease." The award was for $240,000 over
three years. The nutritional supplement was
Resveratrol, an antioxidant found in red wine. There are
more promising substances the Association could have
funded – but it's commendable the Association chose to
investigate something potentially useful.
From the grant description: "The researchers will recruit
participants through clinics of the Mount Sinai
Alzheimer's Disease Research Center. Patients with mild
to moderate Alzheimer's disease will be randomly
assigned to receive either a nutritional supplement or a
placebo. . . " (This is at odds with the grant title,
"Randomized Trial of a Nutritional Supplement to
Reduce the Risk of Alzheimer's Disease." What will it be
-- research to reduce risk of AD or treatment for those
already afflicted?)
I can predict that the results will not be promising. For
one thing, the grant description makes clear the study
does not focus on prevention. If it did, the outcome
might be encouraging. For another thing, studies
testing the efficacy of nutritional supplements typically
use less than adequate doses. (There is no indication of
the potency of the supplement.) A low dose of any
antioxidant doesn't have a chance of stopping AD once
it has started.
While AD (mild or full blown) is not reversible, mild
cognitive decline is another story. (Mild cognitive
decline is characterized as "where did I leave my keys"
type of memory lapse). Several physicians have told me
they believe AD is preventable if intervention begins
extremely early – at the onset of mild cognitive decline
or before. And then, only if a program of aggressive and
adequate amounts of antioxidants and other dietary
supplements are given along with an optimum diet rich
in antioxidants.
Prevailing thought says that accumulation of "plaques
and tangles" in the brain may be a cause of AD. A
scientist at a major university, who believes the
"plaques and tangles" theory is flawed, spoke up at a
meeting of his peers and was promptly hooted down for
his unorthodox thinking. And what might that thinking
be? He believes that finding a remedy for "oxidative
stress" (free radical activity) – that results in the
formation of "plaques and tangles"-- merits more
aggressive research.
One must wonder: Why isn't more grant money awarded
to the plethora of small nutritional studies conducted at
universities all over the world that show incredible
promise for prevention of AD?
This is not to disparage attempts to find a cure.
Certainly, anything that could reverse this dread
disease would be welcome. But surely, wouldn't it be
preferable to find a way to prevent it? Shouldn't there
be equal research emphasis on prevention as well as a
cure?
Meet Dr. Bruce Ames: Is he on to something?
A Press Release, UC Berkeley, February 19, 2002
headline: "Dietary Supplements make old rats youthful,
may help rejuvenate aging humans, according to UC
Berkely study."
It went on to explain that "A team of researchers led by
Bruce N. Ames, professor of molecular and cell biology
at UC Berkeley, fed older rats two chemicals normally
found in the body's cells and available as dietary
supplements: acetyl-L-carnitine and an antioxidant,
alpha-lipoic acid."
"With the two supplements together, these old rats got
up and did the Macarena," said Ames, also a researcher
at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute
(CHORI). "The brain looks better, they are full of energy -
everything we looked at looks more like a young animal."
"Based on the group's earlier studies, the University of
California patented use of the combination of the two
supplements to rejuvenate cells. Ames, through the
Bruce and Giovanna Ames Foundation . . . founded a
company in 1999 called Juvenon to license the patent
from the university. Juvenon currently is engaged in
human clinical trials of the combination."
The work was supported by grants from the Ellison
Foundation, the National Institute on Aging of the
National Institutes of Health, the Wheeler Fund of the
Dean of Biology at UC Berkeley, the Bruce and Giovanna
Ames Foundation and the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences Center at UC Berkeley.
What's missing in the above paragraph? There is no
mention of drug company funding. Thankfully, the
government funds some prevention oriented research,
but it's piddling compared to the amount of money
donated by drug companies for traditional research
geared to finding a cure. And that makes sense. Drug
companies are profit oriented. There is no profit in
prevention with dietary supplements purchased without
a prescription.
The good news is that you don't have to wait for AD to
strike. Beef up your antioxidant intake and learn how to
improve your diet for maximum prevention benefit.
Starting as early in life as possible increases chances of
staying mentally sharp in mature years.
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