Your doctor hasn't before and never will come up with a diet protocol, so you are completely on your own. Danger, danger Will Robinson.
Alzheimer’s Linked To Too Much of This In Your Diet - Sugar
The researchers studied samples of brain tissue from people with and without Alzheimer’s disease.
Excess sugar in the diet could play an important role in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, new research finds.
Too much glucose (sugar) in the diet damages a vital enzyme which helps fight the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
Dr Omar Kassaar, the study’s first author, said:
“Excess sugar is well known to be bad for us when it comes to
diabetes and obesity, but this potential link with Alzheimer’s disease
is yet another reason that we should be controlling our sugar intake in
our diets.”
The researchers studied samples of brain tissue from people with and without Alzheimer’s disease.
They found that sugar can damage an enzyme called MIF (macrophage migration inhibitory factor).
Professor Jean van den Elsen, a study co-author, explained:>
“We’ve shown that this enzyme is already modified by glucose in
the brains of individuals at the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
We are now investigating if we can detect similar changes in blood.
Normally MIF would be part of the immune response to the build-up
of abnormal proteins in the brain, and we think that because sugar
damage reduces some MIF functions and completely inhibits others that
this could be a tipping point that allows Alzheimer’s to develop.
MIF helps to fight the build up of abnormal proteins in the brain, which are characteristic of Alzheimer’s.
The reduction of MIF activity by glucose could eventually lead to a ‘tipping point’ in Alzheimer’s progression.
Dr Rob Williams, a study co-author, said:
“Knowing this will be vital to developing a chronology of how
Alzheimer’s progresses and we hope will help us identify those at risk
of Alzheimer’s and lead to new treatments or ways to prevent the
disease.
The study was published in the journal
Scientific Reports (
Kassaar et al., 2017).
If looks as though they have the hypothetical cause, but what about effect? Can't there be a study correlating having type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer's to test the hypothesis? Or looking at long-term BS data (a1c) w it? It looks easy to me.
ReplyDeleteOf course it looks easy to solve, we understand cause and effect. Researchers don't really care about cause and effect, just where the next research money is coming in. And leaving these open questions can lead to the next research project.
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