| 23-Aug-2004 - Decreasing toxins
in brains of Alzheimer's patients keep cognitive deficits at bay: Pilot
study shows that selectively draining isoprostanes from cerebrospinal
fluid stabilizes cognitive decline
(Philadelphia, PA) – The ever-slowing capacity
to clear the build-up of such toxins as isoprostanes and misfolded proteins
that accumulate in the brains of Alzheimer's disease patients causes the
death of cells involved in memory and language. Domenico Pratico, MD,
Associate Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine, and colleagues have shown in a preliminary study that
reducing the levels of isoprostanes, which specifically reflect oxidative
damage in the brain, by draining cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) can stave
off future reductions in cognitive abilities. This work appears in the
August issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.
As measured by a paper-and-pencil cognitive test, the
researchers found that scores of the eight patients who had the specially
designed shunt continuously operating for one year stayed stable. However,
the scores of patients who did not get the shunt declined by 20 percent
after 12 months. "What's interesting is that the patients without
the shunt didn't stop taking their regular Alzheimer medication, such
as anti-cholinesterase," says Pratico.
Over 12 months, the isoprostanes were reduced by about
50 percent compared to Alzheimer's patients taking standard anti-Alzheimer
oral medications alone. "We were very happy to see this amount of
reduction," says Pratico, who adds that the research team predicted
reductions only half that size. Additionally, the normal components of
CSF like glucose and immunoglobulins did not change after the shunt was
placed in patients. The shunt has a selective capacity to filter out toxins
of a specific molecular weight and size, in this case isoprostanes.
Applying a treatment for hydrocephalus to Alzheimer's
disease, the microns-wide shunt, or catheter, is placed subcutaneously
in a space at the base of the cerebellum. It runs under the skin to the
peritoneum, a space in the belly where body fluids accumulate before flowing
to the kidney to be filtered and eventually eliminated in the urine. The
shunt is put in once, drains continuously, and is cleaned out periodically
by a neurologist.
The eight patients still have their shunts and there are
now almost 100 patients recruited into the next phase of the study, which
is being conducted at Stanford University. Other collaborators on this
paper are: Yuemang Yao from Penn; Joshua Rokach, Florida Institute of
Technology; Gerald G. Silverberg, Stanford University School of Medicine;
Martha Mayo and Dawn McGuire, University of California, San Francisco
Medical Center and Enroe Inc. This study was funded in part by the Alzheimer's
Association. Pratico has no financial interest in Enroe Inc.
This release can also be found at: http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/News_Releases/aug04/Alzheimersshunt.htm.
Full Release - http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-08/uopm-dti082004.php
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