1,520 Alzheimers Headlines
Patricio Reyes M.D., F.A.N.N.
Director, Traumatic Brain Injury, Alzheimer's Disease & Cognitive Disorders Clinics; Phoenix, AZ; Chief Medical Officer, Retired NFL Players Association

Barrow Neurological Institute
St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
"2 NEW THERAPIES FOR ALZHEIMER'S"
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"2 NEW THERAPIES FOR ALZHEIMER'S"
Patricio Reyes M.D., F.A.N.N.
Director, Traumatic Brain Injury, Alzheimer's Disease & Cognitive Disorders Clinics; Phoenix, AZ; Chief Medical Officer, Retired NFL Players Association

St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center



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"Dr.Reyes Changed My Life "
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Patricio Reyes M.D.
Director, Traumatic Brain Injury, Alzheimer's Disease & Cognitive Disorders Clinics; Phoenix, AZ; Chief Medical Officer, Retired NFL Players Association

Barrow Neurological Institute

St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
"PRESERVING BRAIN FUNCTIONS "
Runtime: 50:22
Runtime: 50:22
"2 NEW THERAPIES FOR ALZHEIMER'S"
Runtime: 10:27
Runtime: 10:27
ALZHEIMER'S AWARENESS PROGRAMS
Runtime: 5:00
Runtime: 5:00
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH IN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
PDF Document 850 kb

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4 TALES OF NEUROSURGERY &
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Plus 2 books written by Survivors for Survivors!
Robert F. Spetzler M.D.
Director, Barrow Neurological Institute

J.N. Harber Chairman of Neurological Surgery

Professor Section of Neurosurgery
University of Arizona
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A pregnant mother..a baby..faith of a husband.. .plus... Cardiac Standstill: cooling the patient to 15 degrees Centigrade!
Lou Grubb Anurism
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Michele M. Grigaitis MS, NP
Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitive Disorders Clinic

Barrow Neurological Clinics
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Thursday, June 1, 2017

 

New connection sprouts between Alzheimer's disease and the immune system: VIDEO






























High-resolution confocal images from the hippocampal CA3 region of Alzheimer's mouse brain show amyloid-beta plaques (green) and microglia/macrophages (red). Mice with complement C3 deficiency show an altered glial response to plaques. Credit: the Lemere Lab, Brigham and Women's Hospital

Just as trimming back the branches of an overgrown plant can encourage healthy growth, a little pruning of the connections in the human brain can be a good thing during brain development. But what happens when this natural process goes wrong later in life? Investigators at Brigham and Women's Hospital have found new clues from preclinical models to indicate that this "synaptic refinement" may play a role in neurodegenerative disease. Their findings, published in Science Translational Medicine, offer new insights into the interplay between the immune system and the development of Alzheimer's disease.

The new study looks at the role of complement C3 - a molecule involved in the immune response that is elevated in Alzheimer's disease. Previous studies have shown that C3 helps to trim back the connections between brain cells - known as synapses - during normal brain development. Synapse loss occurs early in Alzheimer's disease and is associated with cognitive decline. Researchers have not known whether blocking the "complement cascade" - of which C3 is a central part - could protect against impairment and neurodegeneration at later stages of the disease. In the new study, the team examined the effects of C3 deficiency in a mouse model for Alzheimer's disease. The team found that mice with the engineered C3 deficiency were protected against age-related loss of synapses and brain cells and had fewer markers of inflammation in the brain.

Interestingly, they also find that in aged mice, the telltale amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's disease remain - and are even more abundant - but cognitive function improved: mice performed better on a learning and memory task, despite the accumulation of plaque in the brain.

"Amyloid plaque deposition occurs years before memory loss in Alzheimer's disease, but targeting how the immune system responds to these plaques could be an excellent therapeutic approach," said corresponding author Cynthia Lemere, PhD, of the Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases at BWH. "We think that in later stages of the disease, it's not necessarily the plaques but the immune system's response to them that leads to neurodegeneration."

Story Source: The above story is based on materials provided by MEDICALXPRESS
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length

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