Archive for the ‘Alzheimer’s’ Category

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BPA and your brain

February 9, 2009

BPA Impairs Synapses Formation in Brain, New Study Finds

September 03, 2008 – News Release

http://www.uoguelph.ca/news/2008/09/bpa_impairs_syn.html

The controversial chemical Bisphenol A commonly found in hard plastic food and drink containers may impair the brain’s ability to learn and remember according to a groundbreaking study conducted by researchers at the University of Guelph and Yale University.

The study reveals that continuous low doses of Bisphenol A (BPA) hinders the formation of synapses in the brain, which allow neurons to communicate with one another and are critical to the way we interpret and remember experiences.

“It dramatically impairs the formation of synapses in the regions of the brain important to learning,” said biomedical science professor Neil MacLusky. “These findings are worrisome because BPA is one of the most widely-used chemicals in the world.”

BPA is used in plastic water bottles and some baby bottles, dental prostheses and sealants, and in the lining inside of food cans. It has been proven that this chemical can leach from these products and be absorbed through human consumption.

Although previous research has been done on the harmful effects of BPA, MacLusky’s study, set to be published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to mimic continuous environmental exposure levels.

Using the dose level declared safe by the United States Environmental Protection Agency for daily consumption by humans, the researchers exposed African Green monkeys living on the Island of St. Kitts to BPA for a month.

Results showed that even at this low dose BPA turns off increases in synapses density in the brain normally induced by estrogen, said MacLusky.

“Estrogen is more than just a female reproductive hormone. It enhances the rate at which some types of synapses are formed and is vital in maintaining normal neuronal structure in regions of the brain that control learning, memory and mood state. When we have BPA in our systems, it seriously impairs this process.”

Although further research is needed, these results support the possibility that BPA may be involved in human neurological conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, depression and schizophrenia, which all feature aberrant synapse formation and are also sensitive to sex hormone levels, he said.

This study was funded by the United States National Institute of Health and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

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Alzheimer’s: “brain diabetes”

February 8, 2009
Alzheimer’s ‘is brain diabetes’

The most common form of dementia may be closely related to another common disease of old-age – type II diabetes, say scientists.

Treating Alzheimer’s with the hormone insulin, or with drugs to boost its effect, may help patients, they claim.

The journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reports insulin could protect against damage to brain cells key to memory. UK experts said the find could be the basis of new drug treatments.

The relationship between insulin and brain disease has been under scrutiny since doctors found evidence that the hormone was active there. The latest study, joint research between Northwestern University in the US and the University of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, looked at the effects of insulin on proteins called ADDLs, which build up in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients and cause damage.They took neurons – brain cells – from the hippocampus, a part of the brain with a pivotal role in memory formation. These were treated with insulin and a drug called rosiglitazone, given to type II diabetics to increase the effect of the hormone on cells. After this, the cells were far less susceptible to damage when exposed to ADDLs, suggesting that insulin was capable of blocking their effects.

Treatment hope

Professor William Klein, from Northwestern, said that drugs to boost the brain’s sensitivity to insulin could provide “new avenues” for treating Alzheimer’s disease.

“Sensitivity to insulin can decline with aging, which presents a novel risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease – our results demonstrate that bolstering insulin signalling can protect neurons from harm.”

His colleague, Professor Sergio Ferreira, from Rio de Janeiro, said: “Recognising that Alzheimer’s disease is a type of brain diabetes points the way to novel discoveries that may finally result in disease-modifying treatments for this devastating disease.”

A spokesman for the Alzheimer’s Research Trust said that the study shed light on how insulin interacted with toxic proteins linked to the disease.

“People with diabetes are at higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s. It is well known that insulin affects how the brain works, and this research adds more evidence to the possibility that Alzheimer’s could be a type of brain diabetes. The most exciting implications are that some diabetes drugs have the potential to be developed as Alzheimer’s treatments.”

Dr Victoria King, of the charity Diabetes UK, said: “We already know that people with Type 2 diabetes are at a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. This study is in its early stages but it is interesting because it suggests that insulin, alongside drugs that help the body use insulin more effectively, may protect against the underlying biological mechanisms associated with the development of Alzheimer’s disease. This is very intriguing and could potentially help with new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease and shed further light on its links with diabetes. We would certainly welcome more research in this area.”

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/7866022.stm

Published: 2009/02/03

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Air Pollution and Dain Bramage, and, yes, your heart

June 26, 2008

[Air pollution breaks down the blood-brain barrier. Quote from the lead researcher on the first study: ""This is extremely important, because once you break down the barriers, you have an entrance for pollutants directly to your brain."" In this study, dealing with dogs in Mexico City,  the pollution lead to symptoms similar to Alzheimer's in humans. In other words, air pollution opened the door to permanent brain damage, including DNA changes in brain cells. In the second study, in Toronto, air pollution's contribution to heart problems is documented... ]

Air Pollution May Damage Brain, Heart

WEDNESDAY, April 16 (HealthScoutNews) — Air pollution may cause brain damage similar to Alzheimer’s disease, as well as heart problems, two new studies suggest. Dogs exposed to air pollution were found to develop damaged brain cell genes in as little as four weeks, according to research presented April 15 at the Experimental Biology 2003 conference in San Diego.

The animals were exposed to the highly polluted air in different parts of Mexico City, and compared against a control group of dogs kept in less-polluted rural parts of Mexico. Mexico City is considered one of the worst cities in the world for air pollution.

More than 200 dogs were involved in the study, which lasted for more than a year. The dogs in the highly polluted environment suffered lung and upper respiratory damage, which let particles enter the central nervous system, leading to gene and DNA damage in their brain cells. Even dogs less than 1 year old were found to have brain lesions similar to those of human Alzheimer’s patients, the researchers say.

Lead researcher Dr. Lilian Calderon-Garciduenas, of the University of North Carolina, says exposure to air pollution causes inflammation in the respiratory tract, which lets tiny airborne particles and metals enter the central nervous system and brain. This, in turn, causes oxidative damage and DNA changes in brain cells.

Air pollution breaks down the vital blood-brain barrier that usually keeps toxic substances away from the brain, she says.

“This is extremely important,” says Calderon-Garciduenas, “because once you break down the barriers, you have an entrance for pollutants directly to your brain.”

The researchers also found signs of lung damage in children as young as 4 years old who were raised in Mexico City.

“The same breakdown in the respiratory system we’re seeing in dogs is happening in children and adults in Mexico City,” Calderon-Garciduenas contends, “and it probably also happens in cities like Los Angeles.”

A separate study presented at the same symposium found a link between air pollution and heart problems in humans.

Exposure to air pollution raised levels of certain peptides in the bloodstream that can constrict blood vessels and decrease blood flow to the heart muscle, the researchers found.

The study was conducted at the Gage Institute of the University of Toronto, where healthy volunteers were exposed to air pollution in a laboratory setting. The volunteers were subjected to air pollution about two to three times the level normally found in Toronto, which is considered one of North America’s less-polluted major cities.

The study focused on endothelin, a naturally occurring peptide that plays an important role in blood vessel health.

“If we expose healthy humans to airborne particulates, we can document a doubling of endothelin in the blood,” says Renaud Vincent, one of the researchers and head of Health Canada’s Inhalation Toxicology and Aerobiology Section.

“We now have at least one mechanism that could plausibly explain how someone with a heart condition exposed to a low level of air pollution could die or come down with severe symptoms, such as congestive heart failure,” Vincent says.

Recent epidemiological studies have found higher rates of death and hospitalization in cities with high levels of air pollution. Vincent says the culprit appears to be airborne particulates.

When test subjects breathed polluted air for as little as two hours, the level of vasoconstrictive peptides in their blood rose sharply and stayed at abnormally high levels for as long as 24 hours, even without further exposure. The changes in peptide levels were proportionate to the concentration of particles to which the subjects were exposed.

“The picture is starting to come together of why we see these spikes in mortality associated with air pollution levels,” says Fred Miller, a researcher with CIIT Centers for Health Research, an independent, non-profit research organization based in North Carolina’s Research Triangle Park.

“The mortality may be coming about because you have this exposure, and how well can your system handle this added stressor?” he says.

Elevated levels of endothelin can reduce blood flow by as much as 50 percent, particularly in people with atherosclerosis, high blood pressure and diabetes, Vincent says.

Further study needs to be done on which specific particulates and their components produce the rise in vasoconstrictive peptide levels, he says.

More information

To learn more about the health risks posed by air pollution, visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the World Resources Institute.

Find this article at:
http://www.statesman.com/health/content/shared-auto/healthnews/hatt/512732.html;COXnetJSessionID=1FoM8iLaWmakFLZ1tokndEgCmdMyG2NxmwRs4c81TE1N9aDDFboX!664728683?urac=n&urvf=10657075327460.718386112449

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