Alzheimer's Could Be Diabetes-like Illness

by Sassy 12 Replies latest social current

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    Alzheimer's Could Be Diabetes-like Illness, Study Suggests

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20051130/hl_hsn/alzheimerscouldbediabeteslikeillnessstudysuggests

    By Steven Reinberg
    HealthDay Reporter
    1 hour, 41 minutes ago

    WEDNESDAY, Nov. 30 (HealthDay News) -- Could Alzheimer's be a form of diabetes?

    That's the tantalizing suggestion from a new study that finds insulin production in the brain declines as Alzheimer's disease advances.

    "Insulin disappears early and dramatically in Alzheimer's disease," senior researcher Suzanne M. de la Monte, a neuropathologist at Rhode Island Hospital and a professor of pathology at Brown University Medical School, said in a prepared statement.

    "And many of the unexplained features of Alzheimer's, such as cell death and tangles in the brain, appear to be linked to abnormalities in insulin signaling. This demonstrates that the disease is most likely a neuroendocrine disorder, or another type of diabetes," she added.

    The discovery that the brain produces insulin at all is a recent one, and de la Monte's group also found that brain insulin produced by patients with Alzheimer's disease tends to fall below normal levels.

    Now her group has discovered that brain levels of insulin and its related cellular receptors fall precipitously during the early stages of Alzheimer's. Insulin levels continue to drop progressively as the disease becomes more severe -- adding to evidence that Alzheimer's might be a new form of diabetes, she said.

    In addition, the Brown University team found that low levels of acetylcholine -- a hallmark of Alzheimer's -- are directly linked to this loss of insulin and insulin-like growth factor function in the brain.

    The report appears in the November issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

    In its study, de la Monte's team autopsied the brain tissue of 45 patients diagnosed with different degrees of Alzheimer's called "Braak Stages." They compared those tissues to samples taken from individuals with no history of the disease.

    The team analyzed insulin and insulin receptor function in the frontal cortex of the brain, a major area affected by Alzheimer's. They found that as the severity of Alzheimer's increased, the levels of insulin receptors and the brain's ability to respond to insulin decreased.

    "In the most advanced stage of Alzheimer's, insulin receptors were nearly 80 percent lower than in a normal brain," de la Monte said.

    In addition, the researchers found two abnormalities related to insulin in Alzheimer's. First, levels of insulin dropped as the disease progressed. Second, insulin and its related protein -- insulin-related growth factor-I -- lose the ability to bind to cell receptors. This creates a resistance to the insulin growth factors, causing the cells to malfunction and die.

    "We're able to show that insulin impairment happens early in the disease," de la Monte said. "We're able to show it's linked to major neurotransmitters responsible for cognition. We're able to show it's linked to poor energy metabolism, and it's linked to abnormalities that contribute to the tangles characteristic of advanced Alzheimer's disease. This work ties several concepts together and demonstrates that Alzheimer's disease is quite possibly a Type 3 diabetes," she said.

    One expert believes declining insulin levels may be an important feature of Alzheimer's, but not the whole story.

    "There is now increasing evidence primarily from observational studies that diabetes, its predecessor metabolic syndrome, and insulin resistance are implicated in increasing risk for Alzheimer's disease," said Dr. Hugh C. Hendrie. He is a professor of psychiatry and co-director of the Center for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Neuropsychiatric Disorders at Indiana University Center for Aging Research, in Indianapolis.

    This study adds support to these biological hypotheses and has perhaps treatment implications for the use of certain types of anti-diabetes drugs that influence insulin resistance, Hendrie said.

    "There are many other factors also implicated in Alzheimer's disease, such as hypertension and inflammation, so I think it's a bit of a stretch at the moment to describe Alzheimer's disease as an endocrinological disorder like diabetes," he said.

    Another expert thinks that insulin and insulin-like growth factors may be the key to slowing the progression of Alzheimer's.

    "We have shown that insulin-like growth factors regulate learning and memory," said Douglas N. Ishii, a professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. "We had shown that by blocking insulin-like growth factors in the brain you block learning and memory."

    When Ishii's group treated rats with insulin-like growth factors, the researchers found that the intervention prevented the loss of both learning and memory. "In addition, we showed that insulin normally regulates brain weight in adults," he said.

    "The clinical potential is that by injecting insulin-like growth factors into patients, one might be able to prevent the loss of learning and memory," Ishii said. "In particular, we have a paper coming out showing that insulin-like growth factors can not only prevent the loss of learning and memory, but prevent the loss of a protein in the brain. This may lead to the slowing down of the progression of Alzheimer's."

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    Having had a step mother who developed this disease, well it hits close to home..

    I hope they find answers..

  • luna2
    luna2

    Me too, sassy! Interesting article.

  • jeeprube
    jeeprube
    Having had a step mother who developed this disease, well it hits close to home..

    My grandfather died of the disease, I feel your pain. I saw this article earlier, and it filled me with joy. To think that someday there might be a medical treatment for this terrible disease, well that almost makes me cry.

    I wish they had had it 10 years ago.

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    yes.. I wish it was years ago too. My step mom has been dead now for 6 yrs. The disease took the last 4 yrs of her life.. it was horrible.. not a real life at all..

    I'm just so hopeful for others!

  • Trace
    Trace

    I've seen family members waste away from cancer and my uncle is currently wasting away on the inside from Alzheimer's.

    It is far from clear which is preferable.

    Alzheimer's is an insidious disease that strips away every ounce of dignity.

    Unless seen up close and personal, folks often don't get it ...even joke about it ... I understand that they are simply ignorant of its impact but ....I have nothing but sympathy for the victims of Alzheimer's and, as importantly, their families (or primary caregivers).

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    Yeah.. when my step mom got it, before long she had no idea who I was. About a yr or so after she was diagnosed, we had to put her in a nursing home/hospital which specialized for Alzheimer's. Not long after that she had no idea who I was. I think she got the idea I was a girlfriend of my dad's because she would actually get angry when I came to visit and beat her fist over and over. I had to stop visiting.

    My dad couldn't afford the care on his own, so he got state funding to assist him. They put a lean on the family homestead and when my dad dies, instead of us children inheriting our land, the state is going to take it away..

    My dream was to always build on the property.. but the dream is gone now..

    But most of all .. I miss Shirley. I think about her often even though she's been dead a number of years now.

  • Billygoat
    Billygoat

    Alzheimers is really an evil disease. My husband's great aunt has it and it's terrible to see her go through what she's going through. It terrifies me to see a connection to diabetes. The numbers of those with diabetes has steadily increased over the last two decades. My father in law has it.

    My dear, sweet mother-in-law spends every Saturday morning at a local Alzheimers nursing home with her two therapy dogs. Those sweet people just love those dogs and love my MIL for bringing them. She says the times she's visited without the dogs, they don't respond to her well at all. They're angry, don't recognize her, throw things at her. But if she has a dog with her, they seem to become somewhat childlike. The animals seem to bring out a wonderful part of their personality.

  • luna2
    luna2

    My grandfather was heading down the Alzheimer road before he died. My parents were taking care of him. Some days were fine, but other days he couldn't remember who we were or how to dial a phone or turn off a faucet. He couldn't order off of a menu in a restaurant because he couldn't connect the words with the actual food (my parents started taking him to buffet-style places which worked much better). He never seemed violent or angry (maybe that would have come later), but it was still awful to see this intelligent, independant man become childlike and virtually helpless.

    It sounds horrid, but I think it was better that he died before completing the descent into oblivian.

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    Billy, how interesting and really not surprising that the response is different when she brings the dogs. Too bad I couldn't have brought with an animal, maybe my step mother wouldn't have gotten so upset with me when I came to visit and she didn't remember who I was.

    Luna, it is so hard.. be thankful though you never dealth with the anger than many get. Even my step mother in the near beginning did odd but angry things. It was especially difficult to see.

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