Drug Shows Early Promise Against Alzheimer's 46
The feed delivers news from Ars Technica about a new and promising treatment for Alzheimer's. The drug Etanercept works by disabling the functioning of a cytokine called TNFa, and reportedly caused immediate improvement — in minutes — in mental functioning in one Alaheimer's patient. Double-blind studies have not yet begun.
Alzheimer's Cure Dupe? (Score:5, Informative)
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Slashdot has "editors" now?
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I don't get it (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sorry what were you saying? (Score:1)
Okay, I could do a search, but that's too easy ... (Score:2)
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Re:Okay, I could do a search, but that's too easy (Score:1)
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i bet.. (Score:2)
Oh forget it, WAY to easy.
Long-term memory restored? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Long-term memory restored? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I spent five years working with Alzheimers clients, and I see two sides to this. For the family it's often that their relative loses an awareness of them which is the worst part.
But I've seen clients who retained some memory of their family begging them in brief moments of lucidity to forget about them. It's heart breaking. Sometimes I thought the clients with little or no recolle
Re:Long-term memory restored? (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems like it would be a question between their happiness and yours. If they're a "normal" person who just happens to not know you, then they can still theoretically still lead fulfilling lives during their final years.
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Think of the feeling that you get when you can't remember where you put your keys and imagine what it would feel like when it's parts of your life. Not too many people that I know of would be happy knowing that they have a past but be able to remember none of it. Or, worse yet, to remembe
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It would be like an overgrown toddler (Score:1)
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It is not pleasant. It really isn't.
If this drug changes that situation such that the
Re:Long-term memory restored? (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, it's the ongoing challenge of her wandering off or forgetting basic needs that's been the hardest for my family to deal with. In fact it's sparked a whole family feud among my father and his brother and sister because they're grappling with how best to care for her.
So my family's case is the opposite of yours; and this drug sounds very promising because it would not only restore my 84-year old grandmother's quality of life (and her parents both lived to be over 100), but also stop the disease from shredding my family's ties.
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BINGO! An improvement that makes it so they can feed themselves and use the bathroom is the difference between keeping them home and putting them in a nursing home. Those are the things that force families to throw in the towel.
My other initial though is that this an off label use of an existing drug. Nobody *has* to wait for the FDA to do anything. If there are no huge do
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He can't remember what he had for lunch, or if he had lunch.
Give me short-term memory and functionality over long term memory any day.
Long term memory is useful when you can
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My Friend (Score:2, Insightful)
These breakthroughs are great but how many people are there for which this will be just too late?
Therein lies the problem: either the trial is too easy and all sorts of rubbish gets through (and there is little impetus to find a real cure) or the trial is too hard and many many people needlessly suffer.
I hope they find a cure soon, because she's a really nice person and doesn't deserve it.
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If I am suggesting anything, it is that life is cruel and that is bad thing. Or, if you are looking for a less fatalistic point of view, that it would be a good thing if the process of drug research could be made more efficient and accelerated (if that is even possible) in order to avoid suffering that is forced upon us by the conditions of the process, while being potentially needless.
Anything else is pure supposition on your part.
What is its effect on "normal" people? (Score:5, Interesting)
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I've heard reports of amantadine, bupropion, and a whole host of more common stimulants like amphetamine's being used for this. Some people report it makes them feel mentally sharper, along with the expected energy boosts.
Others (eg: my psychopharmacology prof) have been dissapointed with amphetamines
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Modafinil (Score:1)
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Yes, but if this takes off, just imagine--very dignified, perfectly lucid drug dealers with excellent memories.
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YMMV though, but I wouldn't go taking it just for kicks, as a) it's expensive as hell (a 25 mg vial costs the NHS 90 GBP + VAT in the UK) and b) it's a fairly potent immunosu
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I love it... (Score:3, Funny)
It pisses him off...
frustrating (Score:1)
NO! (Score:2)
This will never take of in America... (Score:2)
First-hand testimonials (Score:1)
We may never know if it really works, but as a person hoping to one day reach the age at which Alzheimer's is common, I'm in favor of finding a cure.