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  1. TopTop #1
    Zeno Swijtink's Avatar
    Zeno Swijtink
     

    Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease for 100 years'
    By JENNY HOPE
    Last updated at 11:57 PM on 29th July 2008

    Breakthrough: The new drug reverses symptoms in 81% of patients

    A new drug halts the devastating progress of Alzheimer’s disease, say British scientists.

    It is said to be more than twice as effective as current treatments.

    A daily capsule of rember, as the drug is known, stops Alzheimer’s disease progressing by as much as 81 per cent, according to trial results.

    Patients with the brain disorder had no significant decline in their mental function over a 19-month period.

    ‘We appear to be bringing the worst affected parts of the brain functionally back to life,’ said Dr Claude Wischik, who led the research.

    It is the first time medication has been developed to target the ‘tangles’ in the brain that destroy nerve cells, leading to deteriorating memory.

    The drug helps to disrupt this process, preventing the formation of new tangles and loosening those already created.

    Last night the findings were hailed as the biggest breakthrough in the battle against Alzheimer’s since 1907.

    Eventually the drug could be used to stop the disease in its early stages before symptoms have even appeared, it is hoped.

    It could be available to patients within four years although, in the wake of the NHS ban on the £2.50-a-day drug Aricept, there are concerns over whether it would be funded on the Health Service. The trial was carried out by a team at the University of Aberdeen, led by Professor Wischik, who 20 years ago discovered the ‘tau protein’ which makes up the tangles.

    ‘This is an unprecedented result in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease,’ he said.

    ‘We have demonstrated for the first time that it may be possible to arrest progression of the disease by targeting the tangles that are highly correlated with the disease. This is the most significant development in the treatment of the tangles since Alois Alzheimer discovered them in 1907.’

    The research, presented at the International Conference on Alzheimer’s disease in Chicago, involved 321 people with mild and moderate Alzheimer’s disease in the UK and Singapore.

    They were divided into four groups, three taking different doses of rember and a fourth group taking a placebo or dummy capsule.

    After 50 weeks, those with both mild and moderate Alzheimer’s who were taking rember experienced 81 per cent less mental decline compared with those on the placebo.

    Those taking rember did not experience any significant decline in their mental function over 19 months, while those on the placebo got worse.

    The results suggest the drug is about two-and-a-half times more effective than existing drugs called cholinesterase inhibitors.

    Images of the brain showed rember had its biggest effect in the parts linked to memory, where the density of tau tangles is greatest, with better blood flow to these areas.

    The drug works by dissolving the tangle of tau fibres which releases waste products that kill nerve cells, and by preventing the fibres from becoming tangled.

    Consultant psychiatrist Dr Donald Mowat, who monitored the progress of patients, said they were more confident, better able to cope with daily life and not experiencing the level of mental decline they had expected.

    The trial was a Phase 2 study, which checks the safety and efficacy of the drug, but if a large-scale Phase 3 trial due next year repeats the findings, the drug could be available for prescribing

    by 2012. At the same time, the research team is investigating a way of diagnosing Alzheimer’s at its earliest stages when tau tangles are first being formed in the brain.

    People may have these tangles in their 50s, long before symptoms develop, and the researchers hope the drug could be used as a preventive treatment.

    Professor Wischik co-founded TauRx Therapeutics, which is developing the treatment.

    Professor Stephen Logan, professor of neuroscience and TauRx board member, said: ‘This is a fantastic breakthrough and very exciting.

    ‘Patients have been doing well for 18 or 19 months. They are continuing to take the drug and will probably do so until there is no benefit or they start to decline.

    ‘It’s not reversing the disease process, but appears to stabilise it. It could be on the market by 2012.’

    Professor Logan said the team is working on scanning techniques to detect the early stages of tangles so the drug could be used as a preventive but this would take much longer to perfect.

    He said the cost of the treatment is unknown but would need to be compared with the expense of caring for Alzheimer’s sufferers both in the community and in hospital.

    Existing Alzheimer’s drugs costing £2.50 have been banned for NHS use in sufferers of ‘mild’ disease on grounds of cost.

    Around 700,000 Britons have dementia, with the majority suffering Alzheimer’s, and the number is increasing as people live longer.

    Professor Clive Ballard, head of research at the Alzheimer’s Society, said it is a major development.

    But he warned there is a long way to go before the treatment will become available for patients.

    He said: ‘It is the first realistic evidence that a new drug can improve cognition in people with Alzheimer’s.

    ‘However we are not there yet. Larger scale trials are now needed to confirm the safety of this drug and establish how far it could benefit the thousands of people living with this devastating disease.’

    I feel more confident, more positive

    Sandra Sutherland had been struggling to focus on her job in accounts for several years when she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

    The 61-year-old tested positive for the disease in 2005 as doctors investigated another medical condition.

    She said: ‘When I was diagnosed I was absolutely gobsmacked. I tell everyone that I meet that I have Alzheimer’s and they can’t believe it.’

    Mrs Sutherland, who lives with her husband and two sons in Aberdeen and enjoys crosswords and gardening, started a trial of rember two years ago and believes the medication has helped her.

    She said: ‘Since I’ve been on the trial I feel more confident, more positive. I think my concentration has levelled off and not got any worse.’

    Her husband Ian added: ‘Sandra still has days when she is not great

    ‘But there has been no decline in the mini-mental tests she has had to do as part of the trial, so it would appear the medication is working.’

    Jimmy Hardie, 72, used to put sugar mistakenly in the fridge and suffered mood swings. He and his wife Dorothy, a 69-year-old former nurse, live in the coastal village of Boddam, south of Peterhead in Aberdeenshire.

    The couple have two children and five grandchildren, who all live in the Buchan area.

    Mr Hardie was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease three years ago, after he began to suffer ‘blank’ periods and could not remember what he was about to do. He started on the rember trial in 2006.

    Mrs Hardie said she believes the treatment has helped her husband gain confidence. He runs a trout fishery, is an enthusiastic handyman and loves his shed.

    ‘Two years ago if Jimmy had gone to his shed, he may have forgotten what he was about to do,’ she said. ‘Now he is able to plan what he wants to do, go and get the tools that he needs and do the task. It is very encouraging.’

    Mr Hardie, who worked at the nearby power station for 14 years, added: ‘I feel the treatment has helped me. Having a lot of friends and hobbies has also been a great help.’
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  2. TopTop #2
    decterlove
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    The most recent issue of Life Extension also mentions exceptional results with a drug typically used for arthritis called Enbrel. Normally taken as a pill it can be injected in the neck muscles apparently with the patient leaning over for a few minutes and in this way it penetrates the blood/brain barrier and acts as a potent antiflammatory for substances that interfere with the synapse transmission. Very dramatic reversal has apparently been demonstrated with this approach.

    I haven't looked it up online yet but I suspect it should be easy to find.

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  3. TopTop #3
    Lenny
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by decterlove: View Post
    The most recent issue of Life Extension also mentions exceptional results with a drug typically used for arthritis called Enbrel. Normally taken as a pill it can be injected in the neck muscles apparently with the patient leaning over for a few minutes and in this way it penetrates the blood/brain barrier and acts as a potent antiflammatory for substances that interfere with the synapse transmission. Very dramatic reversal has apparently been demonstrated with this approach.I haven't looked it up online yet but I suspect it should be easy to find.
    I thought nothing penetrates the blood/brain barrier except sugar (glucose) & oxygen. And I don't think neck injections would work for that delivery system anyway. I have to question that stuff.
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  4. TopTop #4
    decterlove
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Lots of things penetrate the blood/brain barrier perfectly well...it is a barrier but not a perfect one...hence the need for Enbrel to be given by injection vs oral. Here's a buncha links....sorry I didn't put them in my original response....

    https://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/5/1/3

    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/574631

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/...ubmed_RVDocSum



    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Lenny: View Post
    I thought nothing penetrates the blood/brain barrier except sugar (glucose) & oxygen. And I don't think neck injections would work for that delivery system anyway. I have to question that stuff.
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  5. TopTop #5
    Sylph's Avatar
    Sylph
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/574631

    Don't miss the video in this article! The improvement in function of the lady with aphasia is dramatic. From virtually no words, to being able to call her family members by name and more....
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  6. TopTop #6
    Lenny
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by decterlove: View Post
    Lots of things penetrate the blood/brain barrier perfectly well...it is a barrier but not a perfect one...hence the need for Enbrel to be given by injection vs oral. Here's a buncha links....sorry I didn't put them in my original response....
    https://www.jneuroinflammation.com/content/5/1/3
    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/574631
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/...ubmed_RVDocSum
    Thanks. There are things that go through that barrier, and when they do then one is sick. And you were right this new stuff, except from what I gather they don't inject this stuff into the neck muscle per se so it's not an intramuscular injection, but rather perispinally, which means that it goes next to the spine, behind the sheath the spine is encased in and it looks like the stuff travels up the spinal canal and goes next to the brain where the broken down blood brain barrier absorbs it. Thanks for the update, as it's been about two lifetimes ago since I looked at such stuff. And it certainly has advanced far beyond my kin since then.
    Last edited by Lenny; 08-04-2008 at 04:01 PM.
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  7. TopTop #7
    decterlove
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Well, I'm no expert on the blood/brain barrier but I do know the question came up frequently for the vitamin company I worked for (www.life-enhancement.com) for several years especially in regard to the substance 5htp which we marketed.

    5htp was frequently criticized because people thought it doesn't cross the blood/brain barrier. Many studies however indicate it's efficacy. I have taken it many times in the past when sleep was an issue and while I found that it doesn't address all the possible causes of insomnia, it did provide me with some of the deepest sleep I've ever had in my adult life. So I'm skeptical when people start talking about the impenetrability of the b/b b.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/...ubmed_RVDocSum



    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Lenny: View Post
    Thanks. There are things that go through that barrier, and when they do then one is sick. And you were right this new stuff, except from what I gather they don't inject this stuff into the neck muscle per se so it's not an intramuscular injection, but rather perispinally, which means that it goes next to the spine, behind the sheath the spine is encased in and it looks like the stuff travels up the spinal canal and goes next to the brain where the broken down blood brain barrier absorbs it. Thanks for the update, as it's been about two lifetimes ago since I looked at such stuff. And it certainly has advanced far beyond my kin since then.
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  8. TopTop #8
    Lenny
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by decterlove: View Post
    Well, I'm no expert on the blood/brain barrier but I do know the question came up frequently for the vitamin company I worked for (www.life-enhancement.com) for several years especially in regard to the substance 5htp which we marketed.
    5htp was frequently criticized because people thought it doesn't cross the blood/brain barrier. Many studies however indicate it's efficacy. I have taken it many times in the past when sleep was an issue and while I found that it doesn't address all the possible causes of insomnia, it did provide me with some of the deepest sleep I've ever had in my adult life. So I'm skeptical when people start talking about the impenetrability of the b/b b.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/...ubmed_RVDocSum
    Yeah, I don't blame you about being skeptical regarding that blood-brain barrier thing. Didn't "exist" until about the 1960s for sure.
    That 5htp stuff (and thanks for the referrals) is way beyond me, but I noticed it was dealing with tryptophan, which is one of those essential amino acids we don't produce but need. And your reference speaks to neuroendocrine systems, one of which is directly effected by tryptophan called serotonin, an important neurotransmitter which has a major effect on sleep (among other things). As they have found elevated levels of tryptophan in psychotics and users of LSD, it's pretty heady stuff and one should steer clear of it as much as possible.
    As for sleep, I just found out that I've apnea which accounts for my "grumpy old man" syndrome. Been learning about that and it seems about 20% of us have it! I don't sleep well at night and take 6 naps a day and often feel tired, grumpy, or blue, and my old pep is gone. Do your friends tell you that you snore, or do you awake in the middle of the night with a thrash or jerk? (I know the jokes already, Ms. T., and "yes" she does).Worth considering.
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  9. TopTop #9
    Vet-To-Pet
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Regarding the blood-brain barrier, it definitely does exist, it does work to allow only molecules of certain sizes to cross the membrane (semi-permeable) that allows substances to cross from the general blood circulation into the blood circulation effecting the brain (Pharmacology, UGA Vet School, 1993-94). It doesn't only work when it's damaged, although I imagine that damage to it would allow many more molecules to enter the brain's circulation, which would probably be to that individual's disadvantage. There's a reason why only certain substances should be able to cross the blood-brain barrier, and it's something that's certainly considered whenever anesthesia or other drugs effecting the brain are going to be used.
    Gosh, I finally got to use some of the Pharmacology that i was forced to learn during Veterinary School!
    Smiles,
    Paula/vet-To-Pet
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  10. TopTop #10
    decterlove
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    It sounds a lot like the intestinal lining which is a pretty good barrier in a healthy person but can become inflamed and compromised (intestinal permeability common factor in candida overgrowth issues) under stressful conditions. I wonder what the factors are for the blood/brain barrier? Thanks for the added insight.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Vet to Pet: View Post
    Regarding the blood-brain barrier, it definitely does exist, it does work to allow only molecules of certain sizes to cross the membrane (semi-permeable) that allows substances to cross from the general blood circulation into the blood circulation effecting the brain (Pharmacology, UGA Vet School, 1993-94). It doesn't only work when it's damaged, although I imagine that damage to it would allow many more molecules to enter the brain's circulation, which would probably be to that individual's disadvantage. There's a reason why only certain substances should be able to cross the blood-brain barrier, and it's something that's certainly considered whenever anesthesia or other drugs effecting the brain are going to be used.
    Gosh, I finally got to use some of the Pharmacology that i was forced to learn during Veterinary School!
    Smiles,
    Paula/vet-To-Pet
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  11. TopTop #11
    Lorrie
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Okay! But what do I do about my Some-timers?
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  12. TopTop #12
    Lenny
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by decterlove: View Post
    It sounds a lot like the intestinal lining which is a pretty good barrier in a healthy person but can become inflamed and compromised (intestinal permeability common factor in candida overgrowth issues) under stressful conditions. I wonder what the factors are for the blood/brain barrier? Thanks for the added insight.
    The gasses in the blood at the BBB can cross over if they are the right size and key/lock fit, but the "stress" notion is way beyond everyone on this date. When that person find that "stress" molecule, we will all be richer!
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  13. TopTop #13
    decterlove
    Guest

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Well, I would suggest that various stressors contribute to inflammation and inflammation if being linked to many degenerative diseases now. There may be a fairly straight forward link between the cortisol released in stress situations and oxidant damage, inflammation, etc. I'm just speculating but I don't think I'm too far out on a limb here.l

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Lenny: View Post
    The gasses in the blood at the BBB can cross over if they are the right size and key/lock fit, but the "stress" notion is way beyond everyone on this date. When that person find that "stress" molecule, we will all be richer!
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  14. TopTop #14
    AJL's Avatar
    AJL
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Anyone know the status of this mystery pill?

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Zeno Swijtink: View Post
    Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease for 100 years'
    By JENNY HOPE
    Last updated at 11:57 PM on 29th July 2008

    Breakthrough: The new drug reverses symptoms in 81% of patients

    A new drug halts the devastating progress of Alzheimer’s disease, say British scientists.

    It is said to be more than twice as effective as current treatments.

    A daily capsule of rember, as the drug is known, stops Alzheimer’s disease progressing by as much as 81 per cent, according to trial results.

    Patients with the brain disorder had no significant decline in their mental function over a 19-month period.

    ...’
    Last edited by Barry; 12-01-2017 at 01:13 PM.
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  15. TopTop #15
    Barry's Avatar
    Barry
    Founder & Moderator

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by AJL: View Post
    Anyone know the status of this mystery pill?
    See:
    https://www.alzforum.org/news/confer...ot-work-period
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  16. TopTop #16
    comodin's Avatar
    comodin
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Here's a more recent article, with updated info about the drug and its manufacturer:

    https://www.alzforum.org/therapeutics/rember-tm

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by AJL: View Post
    Anyone know the status of this mystery pill?
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  18. TopTop #17
    gypsey's Avatar
    gypsey
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    The press release quoted is from more than nine years ago, but somehow...this "breakthrough" still hasn't made the news.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by AJL: View Post
    Anyone know the status of this mystery pill?
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  20. TopTop #18
    wisewomn's Avatar
    wisewomn
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    If you google "rember drug" you'll get a number of links with updates. From just a quick scan of a couple of them, I gather the drug is proving not to be as effective as hoped.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by AJL: View Post
    Anyone know the status of this mystery pill?
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  21. TopTop #19
    Mariab964's Avatar
    Mariab964
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    Here is a successful treatment program everyone should know about. It proves the power of diet and lifestyle.
    https://www.aging-us.com/article/100690/text

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Barry: View Post
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  23. TopTop #20
    M/M's Avatar
    M/M
     

    Re: Daily pill that halts Alzheimer's is hailed as 'biggest breakthrough against disease

    To add to Mariab's link : Dale Bredeson is interviewed by Steven Gundry: https://gundrymd.com/dale-bredesen-alzheimers-video/ Site also has information about Dr. B's book: The End of Alzheimer's.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Mariab964: View Post
    Here is a successful treatment program everyone should know about. It proves the power of diet and lifestyle.
    https://www.aging-us.com/article/100690/text
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