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A puzzling disease: Alzheimer's patients given an anti-inflammatory drug show rapid improvement, according to a report from physicians in California. These doctors believe that the treatment improves the connections in the brain.
Technology Review
Neurologists urge caution upon reports of a successful therapy.
A drug commonly used to treat arthritis caused a dramatic and rapid improvement in patients with Alzheimer's disease, according to physicians in California. However, scientists and others not involved in the work worry that the report, which was based on trials in a few patients and hasn't been independently confirmed, may offer little more than false hope for Alzheimer's sufferers and their families.
Alzheimer's patients injected with the anti-inflammatory drug etanercept--marketed as Enbrel--showed dramatic improvements in their functioning within minutes, according to Edward Tobinick, director of the Institute for Neurological Research, a private medical facility in Los Angeles where the patients were treated, and an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.
"The patients improve literally before your eyes," says Tobinick, who began using etanercept in Alzheimer's patients three years ago. He uses an unconventional method to administer the drug; he injects it near patients' spines. In 2006, he reported success with weekly treatments given to 15 people over the course of six months. In a case study in the latest issue of the Journal of Neuroinflammation, Tobinick and Hyman Gross, who practices in Santa Monica, describe how a patient improved within 10 minutes of treatment, and how cognitive tests performed two hours after the treatment showed a marked improvement over tests given before the injection. Tobinick says that the rapid improvement is typical in patients he has injected with etanercept. He treats them weekly, or, in some cases, less often.
"In each case, the person was more alert, calm, attentive, and they stayed on track," says Sue Griffin, director of research at the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, who watched Tobinick treat several patients. Griffin says that she was skeptical when she first heard about Tobinick's approach, but having witnessed the effect firsthand, she says, "It was just completely amazing, like nothing I'd ever seen for an Alzheimer's person."
Minutes before the treatment, the patient in the case study couldn't recall the year or which state he was in. Ten minutes after the injection, he answered these questions correctly. As part of a cognitive assessment performed the day before the treatment, the patient was asked to draw a clock face showing a certain time. He sketched a square. Two hours after the injection, he drew a round face with two hands in approximately the correct positions.
The case report on this patient's rapid improvement is "interesting," says William Thies, vice president of medical and scientific relations for the Alzheimer's Association, but he adds that "we're going to need more information before it's something that people should get wildly excited about."
"There are some kernels of good science here," says David Standaert, director of the Center for Neurodegeneration and Experimental Therapeutics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, but he cautions that "this is not enough evidence that we would start treating people outside of a trial." Standaert was not involved in the work.
Etanercept has been used since 1998, primarily to treat rheumatoid arthritis. It's usually injected into the thigh, stomach, or upper arm, but Tobinick says that by injecting it into the neck, near the spine, the drug can reach the brain. It's a method that requires considerable skill. "It would be incorrect for anyone to think that they could just take Enbrel if they have Alzheimer's, and they'll get better," he says.
Hydrated Fullerenes a promising treatment for Alzheimer's
Cure for & preventive treatment against Alzheimer's disease on the Horizon using Hydrated Fullerenes ( a strong antioxident) http://smarteconomy.typepad.com/smart_economy/2007/11/cure-for-alzhei.html
My mother has Alzhaimer in the last six months many times she wants to go to the toalet but she do.. in the bad. Even she can't speak continusely.
I want to bay enbrel but i want address and e-mail for the producer of this enbrel. Please help me
All regards Alexandra Micu
Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.
TomTom
29 Comments
Alzheimer's
We know what causes Alzheimer's: It is lack of antioxidants: Zandi PP, Anthony JC, Khachaturian AS, et al. Reduced risk of Alzheimer disease in users of antioxidant vitamin supplements: the Cache County Study. Arch Neurol. 2004 Jan; 61(1): 82-8
BACKGROUND: Antioxidants may protect the aging brain against oxidative damage associated with pathological changes of Alzheimer disease (AD). OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between antioxidant supplement use and risk of AD. DESIGN: Cross-sectional and prospective study of dementia. Elderly (65 years or older) county residents were assessed in 1995 to 1997 for prevalent dementia and AD, and again in 1998 to 2000 for incident illness. Supplement use was ascertained at the first contact. SETTING: Cache County, Utah. PARTICIPANTS: Among 4740 respondents (93%) with data sufficient to determine cognitive status at the initial assessment, we identified 200 prevalent cases of AD. Among 3227 survivors at risk, we identified 104 incident AD cases at follow-up. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Diagnosis of AD by means of multistage assessment procedures. RESULTS: Analyses of prevalent and incident AD yielded similar results. Use of vitamin E and C (ascorbic acid) supplements in combination was associated with reduced AD prevalence (adjusted odds ratio, 0.22; 95% confidence interval, 0.05-0.60) and incidence (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.36; 95% confidence interval, 0.09-0.99). A trend toward lower AD risk was also evident in users of vitamin E and multivitamins containing vitamin C, but we saw no evidence of a protective effect with use of vitamin E or vitamin C supplements alone, with multivitamins alone, or with vitamin B-complex supplements.
CONCLUSIONS: Use of vitamin E and vitamin C supplements in combination is associated with reduced prevalence and incidence of AD. Antioxidant supplements merit further study as agents for the primary prevention of AD.
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rwn3
6 Comments
Re: Alzheimer's
TomTom, hi. You sound dismissive of what's presented in this article, but you're own evidence still admits that vitamins are not 100% effective at preventing AD. Perhaps you are a vitamin retailer...
Although I wish that the 30+ years of vitamins my father took had prevented his AD, they did not, so now the situation facing my family is what to do to maximize his remaining functioning and quality of life.
I think the point of the article is that while this treatment is not a cure, it offers increased mental functioning that would be beneficial to those who already have AD. Anything that extends the "good" years of the disease is a welcome approach in my book. If there was something available that would enable my father live at home and recognize and continue to enjoy his grandchildren and see them grow, I would take advantage of it, and he would too.
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bouquets4ever
1 Comment
Re: Alzheimer's
I was the primary caregiver for my mother who had early onset Alzheimer's. After watching this cruel disease ravage her brain eventually leaving her bed ridden, in diapers with no cognitive abilities and understanding how confusing and scary this was for her, I welcome and bless anything that can help those suffering from this. I know the pain that you are going through(it tore me up and permanently scarred me) and I wish I could help you. I will be watching and hoping that this new treatment will be effective and lead to more effective treatments and someday a cure.
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