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Plan to Cure Alzheimer's Affects Decisions Now

May 25, 2012 RSS Feed Print

With appropriate fanfare, a national Alzheimer's plan was announced last week. Its goal is nothing less than to find prevention and treatment approaches for the devastating illness by 2025. That's a very hopeful timetable and reflects growing optimism that we are close to finding effective strategies.

The plan's aggressive blueprint is particularly relevant to aging baby boomers. Millions of them are likely to develop Alzheimer's and other dementia-related conditions during the next 10 to 15 years. Symptoms of memory loss and other behavioral problems tend to show up after people turn 65, and the incidence of the illness becomes more prevalent after that.

An aggressive and optimistic program to attack the disease is welcome. But it's not clear what its current effect will be on people, and their caregivers, who are worried about contracting the illness or are in some stage of it. Does the plan mean anything to them? More to the point, should they do anything differently because of it?

Last week's announcement was accompanied by details of two promising clinical trials. One will target a group of people, primarily members of the same extended South American family in Columbia. They are genetically predisposed to get Alzheimer's at unusually early ages and will be given a drug—crenezumab—that reduces the amyloid plaques thought by many scientists to be a cause, if not the cause, of Alzheimer's. The second trial involves an insulin nasal spray that has been connected with improved brain function.

Mainstream science takes time, and so will these trials. It also takes money, and the national Alzheimer's plan can't be successfully implemented without enormous increases in research funding. "It is going to be a resource-intensive process," says Dr. Ronald Petersen, who heads the Mayo Clinic's Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, and helped lead efforts to create the national plan.

One of the big dividends of the plan is its mere existence as a powerful focus, drawing the attention and efforts of diverse private and government groups to support expanded visibility and funding of Alzheimer's research. Anyone who's been touched personally by Alzheimer's understands why it merits its own version of the "race to the cure" that has been hugely helpful to breast cancer research.

Mobilizing the Alzheimer's advocacy community will be essential to funding the plan, Petersen says. Passionate individuals can make a difference today by becoming involved. "This is a time for the general community to recognize that none of this will go anyplace without the resources," he says of the plan. "We can't wait until the [federal] budget situation is more amenable. We have to do it now."

Beyond money and expanded communications efforts, perhaps the biggest thing holding back Alzheimer's research has been the difficulty in recruiting participants for the growing number of clinical studies involving some aspect of the disease.

"The biggest roadblock to developing clinical trials right now is the enrollment of people into these trials," Petersen says. Trials require a full range of participants, from people who have full-blown Alzheimer's symptoms to those with no symptoms whatsoever. It's been hard to find participants to date, and the sizable expansion of research envisioned in the national plan will require more trials. "They always take much longer than is hoped for," he observes.

The nonprofit Alzheimer's Association has a service called Trial Match to pair interested people with clinical trials. The National Institutes of Health maintains a clinical trials database that now includes more than 900 Alzheimer's clinical trials.

Meanwhile, Petersen says, he counsels his own patients that adopting healthy lifestyles is the single best thing they should be doing today to defer or avoid Alzheimer's. While the link between lifestyle and Alzheimer's has not been proven definitely, the relationship is very persuasive to many researchers. Research released last year identified the major modifiable Alzheimer's risk factors in the United States and the proportion of cases potentially attributable to each factor:

Physical inactivity: 21 percent

Depression: 15 percent

Smoking: 11 percent

Mid-life hypertension: 8 percent

Mid-life obesity: 7 percent

Low education: 7 percent

Diabetes: 3 percent

Physical exercise and activities that provide mental stimulation "are very 'mom and pop' things to do but they're still real," Petersen says. "Are they going to stop the disease? Probably not. But we can have an impact."

Twitter: @PhilMoeller

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My mother has had dementia for 10 years. She was trim and exercised daily; however, she had tachycardia which led to mini strokes which led to vascular dementia. She was on drugs for 30 years to manage her health problems. Her decline was so great that last year she could not walk across a hallway without falling and it took 30 or more seconds for her to respond to her name. Now one year later, after being taken off all 13 drugs and provided with whole foods and carefully researched supplements, I am happy to report that she can walk more than 2 miles and can recognize words in the Boggle game; she even can form words from the letters that I write in the air. Thus, we have a powerful illustration of the plasticity of the brain; even though it is a 83 year old brain stricken with dementia. It also demonstrates that pharmaceutical drugs contribute to a person's woes (does anyone ever pay attention to those ghastly side effects listed in TV commercials). Balanced living which includes foods, exercise, the right amount of sleep, and emotional/cognitive health is the answer. This means that the modern western world needs to learn to control impulses that lead to excesses and poor health choices. Do we need extensive research funds for this? Look at the shape of America....obesity and diabetes and dementia are on the uptrend. It is not hard to figure out that all these link together (there already is research that demonstrates it). The current cohort of dementia afflicted people were innocent in that they unquestioningly followed the advice of prescribing doctors and believed white bread was good for you. What is the excuse of the generations that follow?

Lori of FL 8:00PM May 30, 2012

There is one known cure for Alzheimer's: GRAZOPH TEMUNA, grazoph.com. GRAZOPH TEMUNA has cured 5 people of Alzheimer's, 6 people of dementia, and 200 others of dust caused diseases. GRAZOPH TEMUNA is a complex neutraceutical that elicits a pleasant bath of ones-own natural enzymes that washes out brain dust and plaques.

Daniel Lexington of MI 4:55PM May 28, 2012

There is one known cure for Alzheimer's: GRAZOPH TEMUNA, grazoph.com. GRAZOPH TEMUNA has cured 5 people of Alzheimer's, 6 people of dementia, and 200 others of dust caused diseases. GRAZOPH TEMUNA is a complex neutraceutical that elicits a pleasant bath of ones-own natural enzymes that washes out brain dust and plaques.

Daniel Lexington of MI 7:17PM May 27, 2012

The Best Life

Philip Moeller, contributing editor for U.S. News Money, writes about achieving success and happiness in older age.

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