Alzheimer’s Disease Not Merely Results of Brain Pathology, Purpose of Life Matters

Alzheimer’s Disease Not Merely Results of Brain Pathology, Purpose of Life Matters
Regular physical activity is not only good for your body but it actually increases the number of cells in the hippocampus, an area in the brain related to learning and memory. Lordn/Shutterstock
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For decades, abnormal proteins called amyloid and tau were widely accepted as the cause of Alzheimer’s disease. These theories dominated the field of science and led people to believe that removal of the abnormal plaque formed by the proteins, could cure Alzheimer’s disease.
Clinical trials on Aducanumab as a beta-amyloid antibody did reduce beba-amyloid load in the brain. However, patients’ clinical cognitive impairment did not reduce correspondingly. It leads to the conclusion that Alzheimer’s disease is not merely the results of brain pathological changes, preventive actions seem to be the most advisable strategies for the management.

Pathologies Are Not Determinants of Cognitive Decline

According to the publication on two clinical-pathologic studies on a total of 856 deceased participants,  the common pathologic changes only accounted for less than a third of the cognitive decline. Much remains unexplained.
Stephanie Zhang, Ph.D.
Stephanie Zhang, Ph.D.
Author
Stephanie Zhang, Ph.D., is a columnist for The Epoch Times, focusing on brain and neurodegenerative diseases. She has over 20 years of research experience in neuroscience and neurotoxicity, and was a former research scientist in the Memory Impairment and Neurodegenerative Dementia (MIND) Center at The University of Mississippi Medical Center. She earned her doctorate in public health.
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