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This article leaves out a lot of details, but I wonder if anyone on this

list might want to take a guess at whether this ties in with the notion that

ALZ is caused by infection?

a Carnes

Las Vegas, NV

HYPERLINK

" http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7427541.stm " http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/he

alth/7427541.stm

Immune block tackles Alzheimer's

The body's immune system could be harnessed to fight back against

Alzheimer's disease, research suggests.

Turning off a part of the immune system cleared away harmful brain deposits

and improved memory, the mouse study found.

US scientists, reporting their discovery in the journal Nature Medicine,

said it was like a " vacuum cleaner " had been working in the brain.

The Alzheimer's Society said more research would reveal if the process also

worked in humans.

It was like a vacuum cleaner had removed the plaques

Professor Flavell

Yale University

Alzheimer's disease patients are gradually deprived of their memories and

their ability to live normally.

The damage is caused by the formation of " amyloid plaques " in their brain

cells.

Scientists have been searching for ways to break up and dispose of these

plaques, and perhaps halting or even reversing the symptoms.

So far, while there are some drugs which can delay the progress of the

disease in some patients, there is no cure.

Plaques 'disappeared'

One of the biggest obstacles to a successful treatment is the blood-brain

barrier, which stops large molecules getting into the brain, ruling out many

complex drugs which might otherwise be used.

The researchers from Yale University took a different approach.

They used genetic engineering to block an immune system response in mice,

but only in cells outside the brain.

Researchers had expected the change to worsen the Alzheimer's by sending the

immune response into overdrive, causing too much inflammation inside the

brain.

But they found up to 90% of the plaque material disappeared from the brains

of the mice.

And when the animals' memories were tested using mazes, significant

improvements were found.

Tests revealed that immune cells called macrophages, whose normal role is to

roam around engulfing harmful bacteria or cell debris, were entering the

brain and turning their attention to the plaques.

One of the authors, Professor Flavell, said: " It was like a vacuum

cleaner had removed the plaques. "

Drug hope

Another of the researchers, Dr Terence Town, said that it raised the

possibility of a drug in humans to try to reproduce this effect.

He said: " If results from our study in mice engineered to develop

Alzheimer's-like dementia are supported by studies in humans, we may be able

to develop a drug that could be introduced into the bloodstream to cause

peripheral immune cells to target the amyloid plaques. "

Dr ne Sorenson, head of research at the Alzheimer's Society, said there

was increasing research into inflammation in the brain and Alzheimer's.

" These inflammatory reactions could play an important role in the

development of Alzheimer's, which may have previously been overlooked.

" Further research is now required to find the best potential drug to stop

this reaction and to investigate whether the same effects will occur in

people with the disease. "

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/7427541.stm

Published: 2008/05/31 23:24:43 GMT

No virus found in this outgoing message.

Checked by AVG.

Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 269.24.4/1478 - Release Date: 6/2/2008

7:12 AM

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