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medically documented cases

About the Project

“reversible” Alzheimer's Disease?

Peter et al., 2011Other/Unknown

Peter, F., Susanne, J., Margareta, H., Silvia, W., Wolfgang, K., Thomas, L. and Heinz, T.K. (2011), “REVERSIBLE” ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE?. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 59: 1137-1138. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2011.03437.x

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Abstract

A molecular basis for memory failure in Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been recently hypothesized, in which a significant role is attributed to small, soluble oligomers of amyloid β-peptide (Aβ). Aβ oligomeric ligands (also known as ADDLs) are known to be potent inhibitors of hippocampal long-term potentiation, which is a paradigm for synaptic plasticity, and have been linked to synapse loss and reversible memory failure in transgenic mouse AD models. If such oligomers were to build up in human brain, their neurological impact could provide the missing link that accounts for the poor correlation between AD dementia and amyloid plaques. This article, using antibodies raised against synthetic Aβ oligomers, verifies the predicted accumulation of soluble oligomers in AD frontal cortex. Oligomers in AD reach levels up to 70-fold over control brains. Brain-derived and synthetic oligomers show structural equivalence with respect to mass, isoelectric point, and recognition by conformation-sensitive antibodies. Both oligomers, moreover, exhibit the same striking patterns of attachment to cultured hippocampal neurons, binding on dendrite surfaces in small clusters with ligand-like specificity. Binding assays using solubilized membranes show oligomers to be high-affinity ligands for a small number of nonabundant proteins. Current results confirm the prediction that soluble oligomeric Aβ ligands are intrinsic to AD pathology, and validate their use in new approaches to therapeutic AD drugs and vaccines.

Case Details

Disease Location

Brain (alzheimer's)

Personal Characteristics

Started at 76.1 -year-old, female, mmse was 29 with high memory score. Follow-up at 81.1, diagnosed with ad. After ad diagnosis, changed lifestyle--wrote/published a diary, played accordion, started meeting with friends/relatives, taking photographs, reading, walking, and gardening. Third follow-up at 83.6, 30 months later

Clinical Characteristics

At 81.1, mmse dropped to 25 and episodic memory had declined more than 2 standard deviations. Medial temporal lobe atrophy on mright had increased, temporal corightical atrophy was found with diagnosis of probably ad.

Remission Characteristics

At 83.6, episodic memory improved, mmse was 29, mright showed increasing mesial temporal atrophy

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Lifestyle changes (active lifestyles)