Guest guest Posted March 11, 2003 Report Share Posted March 11, 2003 http://healthy.net/asp/templates/news.asp?Id=6714 Simple Vitamins Could Hold Key to Alzheimer's Scientists Believe Folic Acid Could Be Wonder Cure for the Degenerative Brain Disease, But Lack Funding to Test Their Theory RESEARCHERS HAVE uncovered compelling evidence of a possible cause of Alzheimer's disease, the degenerative brain condition that affects 500,000 people in Britain alone. Scientists in America have shown a link between high levels of homocysteine, a molecule in the blood, with shrinkage of the brain in middle age, which can later lead to Alzheimer's. The discovery raises the possibility that a simple course of vitamins might be all that is needed to prevent millions of people succumbing to the illness. There is already strong evidence linking homocysteine with heart disease, deep-vein thrombosis and stroke. The discovery that it might also play a role in dementia is causing widespread interest among specialists because an individual can lower his or her homocysteine level by taking folic acid supplements. David Smith, a leading British authority on Alzheimer's disease, said yesterday that a study was now needed to establish whether a course of vitamins could safely combat the condition. Prof Smith, a professor of pharmacology at Oxford University and the director of the Oxford Project to Investigate Memory and Ageing, said that as many as 15 per cent of all dementia cases might be due to homocysteine: reducing high levels in the blood could therefore prevent hundreds of thousands of cases. " That is of major significance not only because they and their families benefit but also because enormous sums could be saved, " he said. The latest research will be announced at a meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in Hawaii next month. It suggests that homocysteine is having an effect on the brain decades before people develop obvious signs of dementia. Philip Wolf, a professor of neurology at the Boston University School of Medicine, explained that the findings were based on MRI scans performed on more than 1,000 apparently healthy individuals aged between 50 and 70. " It turned out that those who had the higher homocysteine levels six or eight years ago had the smaller brain volumes and performed less well in tests, " he said. The results add to previous findings suggesting that homocysteine may play an important part in mental as well as physical ageing. " Either the homocysteine produces changes in the arteries and so affects the brain, or there is a toxic effect. It is not clear which mechanism is working here, " Prof Wolf said. Alzheimer's disease currently affects some half a million people in Britain and this figure is expected to rise to 750,000 within 20 years, largely because the population is living longer. Martin Knapp, a professor at the London School of Economics, calculates that the cost to the nation will double from pounds 4.6 billion a year in 1998 to pounds 11 billion annually. Homocysteine levels can be easily measured - tests cost as little as pounds 4 a time and are widely used in the US and Europe, although not the UK. If folic acid is taken to reduce homocysteine levels, the vitamins B12 and B6 must be taken along with it, because of the way the molecules interact. A review in the British Medical Journal recently calculated that 0.8mg of folic acid a day would lower homocysteine levels sufficiently to cut a person's risk of a heart attack by 16 per cent, stroke by 24 per cent and deep-vein thrombosis by 25 per cent. In America, the government has ordered food to be fortified with the vitamin in the hope of reducing cardiovascular problems in the general population. Prof Smith, whose team first suggested that homocysteine and Alzheimer's might be linked, has plans for a study involving 6,000 people with early signs of memory loss, half to be given the vitamin and half a placebo. However, he and his colleagues are struggling to find the pounds 6 million to pay for it. The amount for the five-year study is equal to almost the entire annual budget for Alzheimer's research in Britain. Prof Smith said he could not at this stage recommend widespread prescribing of vitamins to reduce Alzheimer's disease rates. He cautioned that cancer cells are also known to need folic acid and said it was not known what the effect of high levels of folate on people with or at risk of cancer would be. He added, however: " There is a molecule in the blood that seems to be associated with damage to the brain: that has to be important. What we do need - urgently - is a proper randomised trial. " Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc. To , e-mail to: Gettingwell- Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell Web Hosting - establish your business online Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.