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Thread: Scientists Find Alzheimer’s Treatment While Trying To Cure Diabetes

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    Common's Avatar Senior Member
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    Scientists Find Alzheimer’s Treatment While Trying To Cure Diabetes

    Although their goal was to cure diabetes, scientists may have stumbled onto a new medication to help treat the devastating effects of Alzheimer’s disease. According to a press release from researchers at Lancaster University, a new drug being tested for diabetes patients was found to have “significantly reversed memory loss” in test subjects and is now being examined as possible treatment for neurodegenerative disorders.
    The medication, known as a triple receptor drug — or “triple agonist” — reportedly works in multiple ways to protect the brain against degeneration and promote growth. Researchers say that a study of mice being given the drug found that the animals had an increased ability to learn and retain memories.
    “These very promising outcomes demonstrate the efficacy of these novel multiple receptor drugs that originally were developed to treat type 2 diabetes,” Professor Christian Holscher said in the release.
    The scientists added that the mice showed a decrease in chronic inflammation and amyloid plaques in the brain, which have been linked to the development of Alzheimer’s in people.
    “With no new treatments in nearly 15 years, we need to find new ways of tackling Alzheimer’s,” Dr. Doug Brown of the Alzheimer’s Society said. “It’s imperative that we explore whether drugs developed to treat other conditions can benefit people with Alzheimer’s.”
    The discovery of the diabetes drug’s side-effect is not a complete coincidence to the researchers. The findings, published in the journal Brain Research, point to the link between some of the symptoms of diabetes and their link to Alzheimer’s. Insulin desensitisation is not only one of the key effects suffered by diabetes patients, the hormone’s lack of production has also reportedly been observed in the brains of people affected by the memory-stealing disorder.

    http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2018/01/...ment-diabetes/
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    Neat!
    People who think a movie about plastic dolls is trying to turn their kids gay or trans are now officially known as

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    Quote Originally Posted by Crepitus View Post
    Neat!
    Yeah!!

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    In my experience, any manufactured drug is never good. We're not meant to live forever. We live for a while and we die. Why is that so scary?


    I mean, do you really want to live forever? Why? I certainly don't. It would be exhausting.
    Someone please tell me why dying is so awful. Why are we afraid of it? Everyone does it, so it can't be that bad. If it was, no one would do it.
    Last edited by leekohler2; 01-02-2018 at 11:44 PM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by leekohler2 View Post
    In my experience, any manufactured drug is never good. We're not meant to live forever. We live for a while and we die. Why is that so scary?


    I mean, do you really want to live forever? Why? I certainly don't. It would be exhausting.
    Someone please tell me why dying is so awful. Why are we afraid of it? Everyone does it, so it can't be that bad. If it was, no one would do it.
    This is not the quest for physical immortality but rather quality of the time we have here.
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    Quote Originally Posted by leekohler2 View Post
    In my experience, any manufactured drug is never good. We're not meant to live forever. We live for a while and we die. Why is that so scary?


    I mean, do you really want to live forever? Why? I certainly don't. It would be exhausting.
    Someone please tell me why dying is so awful. Why are we afraid of it? Everyone does it, so it can't be that bad. If it was, no one would do it.
    Manufactured drugs are why people live as long as they do now. That doesn't mean dying is awful. I sure don't want to live forever. I expected to die years ago.
    "For all sad words of tongue and pen, The saddest are these, 'It might have been'." John Greenleaf Whittier

    "Our minds control our bodies. Our bodies control our enemies. Our enemies control jack shit by the time we're done with them." Stick

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    Regardless, a cure for Alzheimers has nothing to do with living forever, just quality of life while we live.
    "For all sad words of tongue and pen, The saddest are these, 'It might have been'." John Greenleaf Whittier

    "Our minds control our bodies. Our bodies control our enemies. Our enemies control jack shit by the time we're done with them." Stick

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    I think we would all be shocked to discover how much we discover by accident while researching something else, especially in the world of pharmaceuticals. IIRC Viagra is a one-off drug whose effects are first noticed when they were working on another medicine. Either way, it is something I hear fairly regularly in interviews with researchers, "We were looking at (insert whatever here) and then noticed..."

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