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I just read an article that really got my attention. Like many baby boomers, I've thought more and more about the maladies that seem to be related to aging -- heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer's. I've tussled with the first and the second doesn't really run in my family so I don't think about it very often. The third -- Alzheimer's -- is of particular interest to an intellectual Capricorn who spends most of his days using his head rather than his hands in pursuit of the good life and general happiness. And up until now, in my mind at least, I've wondered whether and how much I'll be at risk of suffering this gradual, insidious decline in mental functioning. 

An article today published in Popular Science discusses how science is on the verge of relating Alzheimer's to what you eat. This is totally fascinating to me, but not totally surprising to someone who already recognizes the effect of food on virtually everything related to longevity, from life extension to the incidence of the major killers. Here's the article reprinted in its entirety. Please read it and let us know what you think in the comments:

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The root causes of Alzheimer’s disease are still a scientific uncertainty, though there’s no lack of suggestions and opinions circulating in the biomedical community. But here’s one we hadn’t yet heard that is gaining traction amid increasing evidence: Alzheimer’s is primarily a metabolic disease much like diabetes. At its root, a poor diet can be the instigator of this degenerative neurological condition. The evidence is so stark that some scientists have even taken to referring to Alzheimer’s as type 3 diabetes.

The latest cover of New Scientist (released September 1) carries a story that has pushed this theory into the popular consciousness, apparently, and the evidence indeed paints a dire picture: 35 million Alzheimer’s sufferers worldwide, with that number expected to increase to 100 million by 2050 based on population aging. Tripling rates of type 2 diabetes in the U.S. alone, where it’s no secret that our diets are less than perfectly healthy. And there are distinct relationships between incidences of Alzheimer’s and either a lack of natural insulin in the body or an impairment of the brain’s ability to respond to it.

First, a quick primer on diabetes. Without going into textbook detail, diabetes (type 2 , anyhow, which is the most common form) describes a condition in which the body experiences excessive blood glucose. This is caused by a deficiency in insulin (and hence why patients use insulin pumps or injections to remedy their blood sugar imbalances). Insulin is a hormone that is naturally produced in the body to signal the liver, muscles, and body fat to absorb glucose from the blood. Diabetes indicates either an impairment of the body’s ability to produce insulin, or some kind of inability in glucose-absorbing organs and tissues to receive and act on those insulin signals.

There’s a long-established link between Alzheimer’s and type 2 diabetes as well as with obesity, but what’s becoming increasingly obvious from study after study is that those who die of Alzheimer’s are generally found to have low insulin levels in the brain. This has led researchers to conclude that insulin isn’t just produced in the pancreas, but in the brain as well, and here it plays a vital role in neuron signaling as well as cell growth and lifespan.

This isn’t hard fact or scientific principle just yet, but the evidence is mounting, further reinforcing something that we all know is intrinsically true: you really are what you eat. You’ll need a free login to read the piece at New Scientist, but there’s additional context over at the Guardian.

Source:
http://www.quantumaging.com/1/post/2012/09/alzheimers-may-be-caused-by-poor-diet.html 

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Comments

10/25/2012 8:50am

We are truly desperate to find a cause and hopefully a cure to Alzheimer's. There is no scientific evidence relating diet to Alzheimer's at the moment. To complicate the matter further there are so many Alzheimer's types that it would be almost impossible to attribute one type to food or another source. Research goes on but with limited prospects to find a cause and cure at the moment. At Remembering4You we focus on the care because we know that it is much needed and improvement in both home/long-term care settings is a necessity at the moment. Our healthcare workforce is ill prepared to take care of persons living with Alzheimer's.

Thank you for posting this story, but it does remind me of the coconut oil theory that surfaced last year. There is always something because people are truly desperate.

Sincerely,
~ Ethelle Lord

Pioneers in Alzheimer's Coaching

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