Anonymous ID: 1fba42 March 13, 2019, 5:04 p.m. No.5667988   🗄️.is 🔗kun

We may finally know what causes Alzheimer’s – and how to stop it

 

Add this to the list of other 'groundbreaking' discoveries that somehow eluded scientists until Trump took over as POTUS. Who still believes in coincidences, right?

 

Here's an excerpt:

 

AFTER decades of disappointment, we may have a new lead on fighting Alzheimer’s disease. Compelling evidence that the condition is caused by a bacterium involved in gum disease could prove a game-changer in tackling one of medicine’s biggest mysteries, and lead to effective treatments or even a vaccine.

 

As populations have aged, dementia has skyrocketed to become the fifth biggest cause of death worldwide. Alzheimer’s constitutes some 70 per cent of these cases (see “What is Alzheimer’s disease”), yet we don’t know what causes it. The condition, which results in progressive loss of memory and cognitive function, usually over a decade or so, is devastating both to those who have it and to their loved ones.

 

The condition often involves the accumulation of two types of proteins – called amyloid and tau – in the brain. As these are among the earliest physical signs of the disease, the leading hypothesis since 1984 has been that the condition is caused by the defective control of these proteins, especially amyloid, which accumulates to form large, sticky plaques in the brain.

 

The bulk of research into understanding and treating Alzheimer’s has centred on this “amyloid hypothesis”. Huge sums of money have been invested in experiments involving mice genetically modified to produce amyloid, and in developing drugs that block or destroy amyloid proteins, or sometimes degraded tangles of tau.

 

It has become clear that this approach isn’t working. In 2018 alone, the US National Institutes of Health spent $1.9 billion on Alzheimer’s research. But according to a recent study, the failure rate of drug development for Alzheimer’s has been 99 per cent.

 

Some have begun to question the amyloid hypothesis. The lack of results has been compounded by the discovery that people – including some in their 90s with exceptional memories – can have brain plaques and tangles without having dementia. In a review of the research to date last year, Bryce Vissel at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia, concluded that there isn’t sufficient data to suggest that “amyloid has a central or unique role in Alzheimer’s”.

 

More here:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2191814-we-may-finally-know-what-causes-alzheimers-and-how-to-stop-it/

Anonymous ID: 1fba42 March 13, 2019, 5:09 p.m. No.5668064   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8129

>>5668000

 

Here's what one of CDAN's readers discovered:

 

The house on St Charles that burnt down in a 7 alarm fire is owned by Anne and Bill Grace. If you use the WWW (Happy 30th Birthday) to Google Bill Grace New Orleans, you get a profile that seems like it's from Tulane University? http://www.tulanelink.com/tulanelink/grace_box.htm Scroll to the bottom of that and follow the link to this website: http://www.tulanelink.com/tulanelink/innsofcourt_01a.htm

 

>https://www.crazydaysandnights.net/2019/03/todays-blind-items-laissez-les-bons.html