Happy New Year! Stanford May Have Just Cured Alzheimer's
It may be as simple as boosting the immune system.
by Rod D. Martin
January 1, 2015
If indeed Stanford University researchers have discovered an Alzheimer's cure, 2015 may be as great a year as 1915 was a catastrophe.
It turns out that solving one of man's worst nightmares may be a simple matter of boosting the immune system. The Telegraph reports:
Researchers discovered that nerve cells die because cells which are supposed to clear the brain of bacteria, viruses and dangerous deposits, stop working.
These cells, called 'microglia' function well when people are young, but when they age, a single protein called EP2 stops them operating efficiently.
Now scientists have shown that blocking the protein allows the microglia to function normally again so they can hoover up the dangerous sticky amyloid-beta plaques which damage nerve cells in Alzheimer's disease.
The researchers found that, in mice, blocking EP2 with a drug reversed memory loss and myriad other Alzheimer’s-like features in the animals.
One other interesting possibility. The research…