Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

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Lord Zentei
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Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

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BBC wrote:Scientists in Canada have raised a tantalising prospect - reversing Alzheimer's disease.

Brain shrinkage, declining function and memory loss had been thought to be irreversible.

They used a technique known as deep brain stimulation - applying electricity directly to regions of the brain. In two patients, the brain's memory hub reversed its expected decline and actually grew.

Deep brain stimulation has been used in tens of thousands of patients with Parkinson's as well as having an emerging role in Tourette's Syndrome and depression.

Yet precisely how it works is still unknown.

The procedure is all done under a local anaesthetic. An MRI scan identifies the target within the brain. The head is held in a fixed position, a small region of the brain is exposed and thin electrodes are positioned next to the region of the brain to be stimulated.

The electrodes are hooked up to a battery which is implanted under the skin next to the collar bone.

Prof John Stein, from the University of Oxford, said: "Most people would say we do not know why this works."

His theory is that in Parkinson's, brain cells become trapped in a pattern of electrical bursts, followed by silences, then bursts and silences and so on. Continuous high frequency stimulation then disrupts the rhythm. However, he accepts that "not everyone will accept this account".
Mystery

How deep brain stimulation could have a role in Alzheimer's is even more of an unknown.

In Alzheimer's, the hippocampus is one of the first regions to shrink. It is the memory hub converting short-term memory to long-term memory. Damage leads to some of the early symptoms of Alzheimer's - memory loss and disorientation.

By late stage Alzheimer's brain cells are dead or dying across the whole of the brain.

The study at the University of Toronto took six patients with the condition. Deep brain stimulation was applied to the fornix - a part of the brain which passes messages onto the hippocampus.

Lead researcher Prof Andres Lozano said you would expect the hippocampus to shrink by five per cent on average in a year in patients with Alzheimer's.

After 12 months of stimulation, he said one patient had a five per cent increase and another had an eight per cent increase.

"How big a deal is 8%? It is huge. We've never seen the hippocampus grow in Alzheimer's under any circumstance. It was an amazing finding for us," he told the BBC.

"This is the first time that brain stimulation in a human being has been shown to grow an area of your brain.

When it came to the symptoms he said: "In one of the patients, he is better after a year's stimulation than when he started, so his Alzheimer's has reversed if you like."
Early days

The findings were presented at the Society for Neuroscience conference in November but they have yet to be published in an academic journal.

Prof Lozano said experiments in animals showed that this kind of stimulation could create new nerve cells.

Prof Stein said he was "very encouraged" by the early findings, but the key would be showing "whether their memory improved".

"It is not unexpected that there might be some saviour of the brain which is dying if you can keep it going," he added.

Dr Marie Janson, from Alzheimer's Research UK, said "it would be very significant" if you could reverse brain shrinkage and that "if you could delay the onset of Alzheimer's for five years you would halve the number of people affected."

To test whether this is really working, rather than being a fluke result, the researchers are going to perform a larger trial.

Prof Lozano says that for now: "a word of caution is appropriate, these are very early days and a very small number of patients are involved."

Starting in April they are aiming to enrol around 50 patients with mild Alzheimer's. All will be implanted with electrodes, but they will be turned on in only half of them. The researchers will then see if there is any difference in the hippocampus between the two groups.

They are specifically looking at patients with mild Alzheimer's because of the six patients with the condition, it was only the two with the mildest symptoms that improved.

One theory they are considering is that after a certain level of damage patients reach a point of no return.
Great news, and one of several brain medicine items that have been published of recent, such as this article on treatments for depression:
BBC wrote:A medical team at Frenchay Hospital in Bristol is pioneering a new form of surgery to treat long term depression.

The technique, deep brain stimulation, involves the use of electrodes which are implanted into the brain through holes drilled in the skull.

The electrodes are attached to a battery pack which delivers small amounts of electricity to stimulate or inhibit specific areas in the brain.

A trial is comparing the effects of stimulating two different brain areas.

The first patient to have the electrodes inserted was Sheila Cook, 62, from Torquay who had been suffering from severe depression for nine years.

She says: "I just wanted life to end. It was like being in a dark tunnel, but instead of there being light at the end of it, it was just darkness."

In Sheila's case the deep brain stimulation only had a short term benefit so she went on to have a second operation, called ablative surgery, to further improve her condition.

She says: "I suddenly woke up in the morning and I thought I feel different, I want to get up, I want to do things. And my whole view of life changed."

The research team hopes that deep brain stimulation might one day replace the more destructive ablative surgery that Sheila received.

The results from seven further participants on the trial will be published later in the year.

A programme about the surgery was featured by BBC Inside Out West on Monday 24 January - BBC One at 19:30 - and nationwide on BBC iPlayer.
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EDIT: fixed link.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Best news I've read seen today, by far.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

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I'd love to see this replicated.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Tiriol »

This is indeed good news. My family has fortunately so far been able to escape the ravages of Alzheimer's disease and many similar diseases, but not all are so lucky. With any luck we have a very possible cure at our hands, one that might in the future prevent countless lives from the indignity of losing their cognitive abilities when they get old.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Forgothrax »

This would be incredible... if it works. I work in Alzheimer's/Dementia care and watching people go down that long and winding road is heartbreaking.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Lord Relvenous »

Simon_Jester wrote:I'd love to see this replicated.
Amen. I'd love to see a cure to Alzheimer's. I hope a peer group gets started on their own confirming experiment soon.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

If this is replicated it will be one of the greatest medical finds in history. If.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Ziggy Stardust »

Pretty neat. Someone at the University of Maryland (where I work) is working on something involves applying electrical shocks to patients in an MRI machine, but I'm not entirely sure what purpose (I forgot to ask, I was so amazed as the prospect of using any sort of electric device in A WORKING MRI MACHINE). I wonder if the research is in any way related.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

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The Romulan Republic wrote:Best news I've read seen today, by far.
"I'm sorry, your insurance plan doesn't cover this procedure. Furthermore, our company has determined that the patient's mental infirmity is a preexisting condition, and therefore the patient is removed from any further coverage. Have a nice day."
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Highlord Laan wrote:
The Romulan Republic wrote:Best news I've read seen today, by far.
"I'm sorry, your insurance plan doesn't cover this procedure. Furthermore, our company has determined that the patient's mental infirmity is a preexisting condition, and therefore the patient is removed from any further coverage. Have a nice day."
And this negates it being good news how? First, the above would not apply in a wide range of countries outside the US. Second, being able to treat it in anyone is still something good.

Jesus, do you get off on being as cynical as possible?
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Highlord Laan »

The Romulan Republic wrote:
Highlord Laan wrote:
The Romulan Republic wrote:Best news I've read seen today, by far.
"I'm sorry, your insurance plan doesn't cover this procedure. Furthermore, our company has determined that the patient's mental infirmity is a preexisting condition, and therefore the patient is removed from any further coverage. Have a nice day."
And this negates it being good news how? First, the above would not apply in a wide range of countries outside the US. Second, being able to treat it in anyone is still something good.

Jesus, do you get off on being as cynical as possible?
It doesn't negate it at all, however it does put it in perspective. Complete cynicism means that I can pleasantly surprised and have a moment of happiness for the future, rather than going through life being perpetually disappointed by reality.

So, as awesome as this development is, I fully expect research into it to be fruitless, as it would be horrendously difficult to implement it into a marketable strategy or parceled package. Instead, I expect it to be killed in development be backers that want more concrete results in an easily marketable pill form.

Of course, if I am proven wrong, not only will I be impressed, I will be on cloud nine with joy. Not that I expect that to happen in any way, shape or form.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Though I do acknowledge that a cynical outlook means you're more likely to be pleasantly surprised, that only works if you actually acknowledge the good things when they come along.

And this is a good thing.
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Re: Alzheimer's: Deep brain stimulation 'reverses' disease

Post by Eframepilot »

It sounds like this isn't a cure for Alzheimer's, since the disease advances by brain-killing plaques smothering the entire organ, but as a treatment to promote brain regeneration, this is very exciting.
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