A twice-daily dose of insulin, sprayed deep in the nose for easy transit  to the brain, may slow or stop the progression of Alzheimer’s disease,  according to a new pilot study. The researchers gave 104 patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease or pre-Alzheimer’s cognitive impairment one of three nasal sprays for  four months. One group of patients got a nasal spray with a moderate  dose of insulin twice a day, one group got a higher dose, and the third  got a squirt of saline solution, as a placebo
The memory, cognitive abilities, and day-to-day functioning of patients given insulin stayed constant or improved slightly—particularly  for those given the moderate dose of insulin rather than the high  dose—while the abilities and memory of patients given the placebo  declined.
It makes sense that insulin might slow the advance of the disease. In addition to its effect on blood sugar levels, insulin seems to guard against some of the ill effects of the  amyloid plaques  that build up in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. Diabetics and  other people whose bodies produce too little insulin or aren’t  responsive to it are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s.
This was a small, short-term study; to know whether insulin nasal sprays  can really keep Alzheimer’s at bay, researchers will need to run  longer-lasting studies with more patients. But given that there aren’t  currently any ways to treat or slow the course of Alzheimer’s, this  study highlights a promising direction for further research.
 by "environment clean generations"

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar