Posts Tagged ‘Brain Function’

UK Studies to Look at Alzheimer’s, Down Syndrome

Monday, July 12th, 2010

The University of Kentucky Sanders-Brown Center on Aging is looking for two groups of patients to help learn more about Alzheimer’s disease.

One study will examine how a new drug can supplement existing treatment; the other focuses on Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s.

The first study is looking at how the drug Dimebon can help Alzheimer’s patients already taking Aricept.

Because Alzheimer’s is a complex disease, patients sometimes need multiple drugs to address their symptoms, said Dr. Gregory Jicha, assistant professor of neurology at the UK College of Medicine. Aricept is one of the most widely prescribed Alzheimer’s drugs in the country.

Dimebon is thought to improve the mitochondrial function in brain cells, preventing damage. Cell parts called mitochondria are critical to brain function because they are the primary source of cells’ energy.

Aricept appears to enhance the brain’s concentration of acetylcholine, an enzyme crucial to memory and learning, he said.

Jicha said a good candidate for this study would have relatively mild symptoms. “In the early stage of the disease people can understand what the trial means and participate in the decision to help find better medicine and potential cures for Alzheimer’s,” he said.

The UK effort is part of an international project that will evaluate more than 1,000 patients, including at least a dozen at UK.

Another new research project looks at the connection between Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s. The $2.4 million, five-year study will look at how Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s disease may affect a person’s memory and thinking as they get older, said Dr. Elizabeth Head, who will lead the study.

The study will recruit and follow 40 people older than 35 with Down syndrome. In addition, 10 to 12 people with Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s disease will be recruited for a single research session.

The Down syndrome patients without Alzheimer’s will be tested every six months.

Head said the life expectancy of Down syndrome patients has increased dramatically over the years but the services they need as they age have not kept up. “There is really not a whole lot out there for them,” she said. “They are a little underserved.”

At the same time, she said, Down syndrome patients offer a unique opportunity to study Alzheimer’s. The chromosomal abnormality that creates Down syndrome also results in the overproduction of the protein that causes Alzheimer’s.

“They make a protein that causes Alzheimer’s disease. They are making too much of it from birth,” she said.

Most middle-age Down syndrome patients have full-blown Alzheimer’s disease in their brain but not all of them develop dementia, she said. Understanding how they continue to function could be key to helping others with Alzheimer’s, she said.

More than 400,000 people in the United States have Down syndrome. Overall, 50 percent of people with Down syndrome age 55 and older may have Alzheimer’s disease.

Overall, some 5.3 million in the United States have Alzheimer’s. According to the Alzheimer’s Association that number is expected to increase dramatically as the baby boomer generation continues to age.

Jicha said it’s possible if a patient isn’t right for one of these studies, several more are currently underway that might be a better fit.

“We always have a variety of opportunities,” he said. “Every study has a different number demands.”

“We are trying to build an army to fight Alzheimer’s,” he said. “That army doesn’t just include doctors and researchers but battalions of patients willing to pick up these new weapons to join the fight.”

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Dimebon Online

http://www.dimebonalzheimers.com/

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How to Treat Cognitive Symptoms of Alzheimer's Disease

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Currently in 2009 , there are several classes and broad classifications of drugs , medications and supplements on the “market”  on in the wares of practitioners – and “alternative”  therapy practitioners as well as support staff and systems in the medical and health care communities.  These can be used and utilized to treat and better control the cognitive symptoms of Alzheimer’s.

 

Exclusive Interview With Alzheimer’s Expert – Thies: The most mature theory of Alzheimer’s is the so-called amyloid hypothesis. And we should emphasize that this still is a hypothesis. Until we can show that if we change the amyloid concentration in the brain and it changes the course … Thies: The way that they measure the impact of Alzheimer’s drugs is on cognitive measures. There are multiple scales for measuring the course of the disease. We can measure people’s memory, we can measure other kinds of functional …

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Dimebon Alzheimers Disease

http://www.dimebonalzheimers.com

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History of Head Trauma in Alzheimer's Disease

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

It turns out  generally that whether a history of head trauma or injury is a cause of Alzheimer’s disease of the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease is not certain or indeed uncertain by itself.

It can be pointed out that some published studies of repute suggest that head trauma that results in what may or should be considered  a loss of consciousness is a definite risk factor and factors into the risks of a patient developing Alzheimer’s disease.

Thus people who expose themselves to repeated head trauma or injury , such as you might find in the classic cases of boxers such as Muhammed Ali, who developed serious Parkinson’s disease – perhaps as a result of his boxing career, or football players can be said to be , as a result , at a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease as opposed to if they had not followed their chosen career path or paths.  Regardless of whether or not actual Alzheimer’s disease progresses as a result of the specific person’s health and mental and memory cognitive skill levels-  many such people who are continually exposed to head trauma and head trauma injuries  do go later to more often than the general population , have incidences of difficulties of memory , concentration, speech  and other brain function difficulties higher than the general population overall .

Dimebon Alzheimer?s Disease

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