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    Alzheimer's Drug May Impair Memory

    VANCOUVER – A class of drugs being investigated to treat Alzheimer's disease may actually have the opposite effect of the original intent — they may impair memory, a new study in animals suggests.

    The drugs, known as BACE1 inhibitors, are designed to prevent the formation of the protein plaques in the brain that are a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. However, the new study suggests these drugs interfere with the brain's wiring, potentially affecting the formation of new memories.

    While the drugs aren't approved by the Food and Drug Administration, several companies are pursuing their development, and some have been tested in human trials.

    The new findings are not a red light for BACE1 inhibitor development, study researcher Robert Vassar, a professor of cell and molecular biology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, said here today at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's annual meeting. But researchers should proceed with caution, Vassar said.

    "It's something the drug makers need to keep their eyes out for," Vassar told MyHealthNewsDaily.

    The enzyme BACE1 is involved in forming amyloid beta proteins, which aggregate to form plaques. The drugs are based on the idea that blocking the enzyme could slow the disease, or help with symptoms.

    However, Vassar's study found BACE1 has another role in the brain, guiding the growth of axons — the long, slender appendages of nerve cells. In a sense, BACE1 is like an electrician, Vassar said, helping to wire up the brain.

    In the study, Vassar and colleagues genetically engineered mice so they did not have the BACE1 enzyme. The mice had an incorrectly wired olfactory system, which is used for the animal's sense of smell.

    "It's like a badly wired house," Vassar said.

    While the wiring of this system takes place mainly during development, brain cells die and regenerate throughout life, so there is a continuous need for axon guidance, Vassar said.

    Vassar said he suspects other parts of the brain, such as the hippocampus, may be affected by BACE1 inhibition, and that the new results may explain why previous studies in mice lacking BACE1 showed certain defects, including mild impairment on memory tests.

    It's not clear whether the same thing happens in people. And even if it does, these drugs may still have a use against Alzheimer's, Vassar said.

    "These BACE1 blockers might be useful at a specific dose that will reduce the amyloid plaques but not high enough to interfere with the wiring. Understanding the normal function of BACE1 may help us avoid potential drug side effects," Vassar said.

    Pass it on:  Studies in animals suggest a class of Alzheimer's drugs may have detrimental affects on memory, and development of these drugs should proceed with caution, researchers say.

    This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily staff writer Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner. Find us on Facebook.

     
    • Paul  •  Wichita, Kansas  •  3 mths ago
      Too many of these new drugs cause more problems than they solve.......seems to keep the lawyers in mercedes, though.
      • P 3 mths ago
        At least they're good for SOMETHING.
      • Patrick O 3 mths ago
        You would rather they stop producing drugs? And the lawyers are in Mercedes and the drugs cost so much, in part at least, because greedy consumers sue over everything....
    • Bill  •  3 mths ago
      This happens all the time. Most drugs for arthritis help relieve the pain but actually break down the tissue in joints over time, making it even worse. More recently, some drugs for osteoporosis, like Fosamax and Boniva were taken off the market because they *weakened* bones and caused fractures. So... ya' still think "FDA approved" is such a great idea?
      • P 3 mths ago
        It was also the FDA that took it off the market, right? Without them, people would still be using the drugs, right? Give the FDA a break now and then, They get it right most of the time.
      • Bill 3 mths ago
        Oh, puh-leeze! If they "get it right most of the time" then why do more than 100,000 people die in the U.S. each year from taking pharmaceutical drugs? That's an acceptable loss to you? It obviously is to the FDA.
      • Aaron 3 mths ago
        Fosamax and Boniva do increase the calcium in bones. But what they don't tell you is that the matrix of calcium that these drugs stimulate your body to create make the bone brittle in side to side motion like when you bend a stick. Compressive strength is increased somewhat. The bones ability to bend a tiny amount spreads the force applied to it over a longer period of time. Although the time period is very short, it makes a big difference on how much stress it can take. Instead of being a well engineered matrix of bone our bodies naturally lay down, these drugs create dense brittle bone. These drugs aren't even intended for long term use because of this. Exercise of any sort stimulate your bones to become stronger. I'm afraid people think pills will fix anything and they are sold as a quick fix. I don't think people want to TRY to be healthy. They want it to be handed to them in a pill.
    • Anonymous  •  3 mths ago
      Welcome to the era of the HUMAN BETA-TESTER.
      • M.y 3 mths ago
        Yo. We've been in that era for a long long time.
    • Mr X  •  Pasadena, California  •  3 mths ago
      it reminds me of the TV ad saying anti-depressant medicine may increase the risk of suicidal thought. I mean #$%$?
    • CH  •  3 mths ago
      Oops.

      Can't wait to hear the quiet, rapidly spoken, and quite long weasle clause on the TV ad.
    • stocky  •  Vernon, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      If you have had a loved one diagnosed, and treated for Alzheimer's, you know what a heartbreaking experience it is to watch that person slowly go downhill. My mother passed away from Alzheimer's disease, and before we finally had to place her in the hospital, I sacrificed and moved home to care for her. She was not bad at that point. But during the course of 2 yrs I watched my mother go from a great mind to a forgetful mind. I watched as she slowly went from understanding to not understanding. From being in the present to living in the past. It was all I could do to keep from crying every nite, as I lay there in bed, thinking what this horrible disease was doing to my dear mother. Not only does it wear you down emotionally, but physically as well. I would not wish this terrible disease on anyone, nor would I wish for anyone to have to go thru what I went thru taking care of a loved one who has it.
      • Clint 3 mths ago
        Sorry to hear that Stocky. My mother has pretty serious dementia. Just wondering if your mom took any medication? Sounds like it didn't help even if she did.
      • AZ Rider 3 mths ago
        I'm sorry Stocky. I went thru the same thing. My mom had it too. Her decline took 4 years and it was so heartbreaking. She tried one of the drugs but it upset her stomach and then she would not eat so we took her off the drugs. This disease is so insidious--God bless those dealing with it..
      • stocky 3 mths ago
        Sorry it took so long to get back with you guys, I laid down for awhile. Yes, mother was taking medication for her ailment, but it did nothing but prolong the enevitable. After mother was placed in the nursing home, she slowly went from a large size woman to a very thin 100 lb woman, and got to the point that she did not even recognize her own family anymore, nor could she communicate. She just stared at us with tears in her eyes. I remember holding her hand, and I could feel her gripping my hand as if she wanted to say something. When mother died, I was in the hospital for extreme dehydration. I did not even get to attend her funeral. But she is in my heart always.
    • Robert  •  3 mths ago
      Sounds like a drug company's wet dream: take the drug, symptoms slowly get worse, must need higher dose, take more of the drug, symptoms continue to slowly get worse, lather, rinse, repeat.
    • A A  •  3 mths ago
      Marijuana is safer than prescription drugs.
      • Aaron 3 mths ago
        Marijuana increases the dopamine in the brain which can cause an unsafe rise in blood pressure. My friends brother had a stroke from this. There are people that shouldn't smoke pot. I believe it should be medically regulated. NO drug is completely safe just because you had no problems with it.
      • Dataman 3 mths ago
        IT lowers blood pressure.
      • thingsmaynotwork 3 mths ago
        From my experience, and that of friends and family, FDA approved medication has 'maimed' five people and killed four. Five of the medications that were suggested to me by specialists have since been pulled from the market. Being 'regulated' does not make anything 'safer.' It's about money and nothing more.
        I happen to know a 'whistle blower' Dr. who a company tried to force to give his blessing to a drug he knew was unsafe. He was 'let go', the med. hit the market with the thumbs up of another Dr....It's no longer 'FDA approved' or used at all.
        Also, look at Duke and the faux cancer studies. [They] are not, and have never been, honest with the public. We are no more than guinea pigs with wallets.
    • Peter S  •  Sacramento, California  •  3 mths ago
      An old saying in medicine. Don't be the first or the last to try a new medicine.
    • thingsmaynotwork  •  3 mths ago
      The side effects of a majority of prescribed medications are worse than the original issue itself. And a majority of the time the Dr.'s will defend and even side with, the pharma. companies to the detriment of their own patients...The worst past is, they don't care.
      When I pointed out an obvious 'cause and effect' from a medication years ago, the Dr. ignored it and insisted it was 'my imagination'..Fast forward, no, it was not all in my head and the damage [it] did remains to this day. We are guinea pigs with wallets. Before you start a 'new' drug, ask for the body count.
    • Ricky  •  Lubbock, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Sounds like the ad for a gout medicine that listed, as a side effect, "May cause gout flareups!"
    • C  •  3 mths ago
      so it really IS an alzheimers drug
    • JOHN  •  3 mths ago
      Notice how all pharmaceutical companies never try to find a cure for anything. They only create chemical time-bombs to treat symptoms. Then you have to buy another drug to treat the side effects the first drug caused. And then another, and another, and another...
    • Clint  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      "Alheimer's drug may impair memory"??? You gotta love the pharmaceutical industry.
    • Jay  •  Manchester, New Hampshire  •  3 mths ago
      i had that drug but i forgot where i put it.
    • Suzanne  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      Be very aware of the side effects of the drugs you take or your elderly loved ones take. Don't simply stay on something that makes you feel worse. A good doctor will listen and try other things.Everyone is different and no one knows your body like you do.
    • David  •  3 mths ago
      Lessee, these new drugs can cause the patient to lose memory. And part of Alzheimer's symptomatology is loss of memory. So, tell me, what do these drugs actually do to "help" Alzheimers patients? Cause them to forget they have Alzheimers? And I am quite certain that Pfizer or Novarta or whatever pharma manufacturers working on these have nothing but visions of lots and lots of dollars coming their way for their new "wonder drug." Is it me, or is something stinking here in America?
    • Mick Sanmiguel  •  Pharr, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Lady in Vernon, Texas: My heart is with you because I'm going through the same with my mother with this horrible/terrible Alzheimer's disease. I am an only child so it's even harder to comply with all the daily chores needed. Only a family member knows the horrible experience this is. Like you I've cried so many nights when alone seeing my Mom deteriorate day by day. May God give us all caretakers patience, strenght and sanity so we can go on with this ordeal. Because they (patients) are in their own world. May God Bless you all!
    • constructive  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      A drug that impairs memory on an altimeters or dementia patient?? Having cared for a family member with the disease. There is no way to impair their memory, the disease does that.

      My father was delusional and seeing things that were not there. His memory was not even in question, his sanity and ours was.

      Any person who has cared for a person with this horrible disease knows that sanity is the #1 reason to focus on. I watched my father go from being a child to a dangerous human being.

      I would love to slap these people in the head. They have no idea on what it takes to treat a person with this disease.

      To treat a person with the disease you need multiple caring people and a support network. The support network is there to tell you to put the person in a care facility and hope for the best.

      My father, as sick as he was was a danger to my mother. He attacked her, pulled a natural gas stove out and turned the boiler up to the max setting. Anyone who has a loved one with the illness needs to get them care.

      Their memory is gone, that is what it does. Articles on how the drug affects it is like saying cigarettes kill a person who has lung cancer.
    • Michael P  •  Frankfurt Am Main, Germany  •  3 mths ago
      Stories that make you go....Uhmm?
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