Attacking Alzheimer's with Red Wine and Marijuana
http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/110806/
Two new studies point to a wonderful way to ward off Alzheimer's
disease and other forms of age-related memory loss. This article
first
appeared on Miller-McCune.com.

Two new studies suggest that substances usually associated with
dulling the mind -- marijuana and red wine -- may help ward off
Alzheimer's disease and other forms of age-related memory loss. Their
addition comes as another study dethrones folk remedy ginkgo biloba
as
proof against the disease.


At a November meeting of the Society of Neuroscience in Washington,
D.C., researchers from Ohio State University reported that THC, the
main psychoactive substance in the cannabis plant, may reduce
inflammation in the brain and even stimulate the formation of new
brain cells.


Meanwhile, in the Nov. 21 issue of the Journal of Biological
Chemistry, neurologist David Teplow of the University of California,
Los Angeles reported that polyphenols -- naturally occurring
components of red wine -- block the formation of proteins that build
the toxic plaques thought to destroy brain cells. In addition, these
substances can reduce the toxicity of existing plaques, thus reducing
cognitive deterioration.


Together, the studies suggest scientists are gaining a clearer
understanding of the mechanics of memory deterioration and
discovering
some promising approaches to prevention.


Previous research has suggested that polyphenols -- which are found
in
high concentrations in tea, nuts and berries, as well as cabernets
and
merlots -- may inhibit or prevent the buildup of toxic fibers in the
brain. These fibers, which are primarily composed of two specific
proteins, form the plaques that have long been associated with
Alzheimer's disease.


UCLA's Teplow and his colleagues monitored how these proteins folded
up and stuck to each other to produce aggregates that killed nerve
cells in mice. They then treated the proteins with a polyphenol
compound extracted from grape seeds. They discovered the polyphenols
blocked the formation of the toxic aggregates.


"What we found is pretty straightforward," Teplow declared. "If the
amyloid beta proteins can't assemble, toxic aggregates can't form,
and, thus, there is no toxicity." If this also proves true in human
brains, it means administration of the compound to Alzheimer's
patients could "prevent disease development and also ameliorate
existing disease," he said. Human clinical trials are upcoming.


At Ohio State, researchers led by psychologist Gary Wenk are studying
the protective effects of tetrahydrocannabinol, commonly known as
THC.
They found that administering a THC-like synthetic drug to older rats
performed better at a memory test than a control group of non-
medicated elderly rodents.


In some of the rats, the drug apparently lowered inflammation in the
hippocampus -- the region of the brain responsible for short-term
memory. It also seems to have stimulated the generation of new brain
cells.


"When we're young, we reproduce neurons and our memory works fine,"
said co-author Yannick Marchalant, another Ohio State psychologist.
"When we age, the process slows down, so we have a decrease in new
cell formation in normal aging. You need those cells to come back and
help form new memories, and we found that this THC-like agent can
influence creation of those cells."


Wenk added two cautionary notes to his report. First, to be
effective,
any such treatment along these lines would have to take place before
memory loss is obvious. Second, the researchers still have much work
to do.


"We need to find exactly which receptors are most crucial" to the
generation of new brain cells, he said. This discovery would "ideally
lead to the development of drugs that specifically activate those
receptors."


In the meantime, should aging baby boomers who are worried about old-
age mental impairment light up a joint? Wenk was cautious in his
answer, no doubt because marijuana is suspected to be harmful to
health in other ways.


"Could people smoke marijuana to prevent Alzheimer's disease if the
disease is in the family? We're not saying that, but it might
actually
work," he said. "What we are saying is it appears that a safe, legal
substance the mimics those important properties of marijuana can work
on receptors in the brain to prevent memory impairments in aging. So
that's really hopeful."





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