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Monday, November, 30, 2009
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Smoking and Alzheimer's

syed Iqbal Hussain shahid MD

syed Iqbal Hussain shahid MD

Saturday, May 03, 2008
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There have been conflicting studies in the past that emphasize the beneficial effects of smoking in preventing Alzheimer's illness.

It is now proven that smoking has no beneficial effect whatsoever in Alzheimer's prevention. On the contrary smokers get Alzheimer's earlier and than non smokers.

Here are the results of the latest study.

                                                       It is finally official

 

 

  Smoking is not good for you in any way, shape or form. A new study rules out the last remaining claim that nicotine in cigarettes may have at least some health benefits. California researchers say they are absolutely certain that nicotine does not prevent Alzheimer's disease, as some scientists had suspected.   Original source:
The final excuse for smoking -- that it might reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease -- has just been stubbed out, findings from an animal study suggest.

  • Past animal and human studies have indicated that nicotine exposure inhibits the formation of amyloid plaque, a key feature of Alzheimer's disease.
  • However, the new study shows that chronic nicotine use appears to worsen the effects of a brain protein called tau, which is responsible for the fibrous tangles that are the other hallmark of the disease.
  • So, at best, the effects of nicotine are probably canceled out, according to the researchers.
  • Dr. Frank M. LaFerla, from the University of California at Irvine, and colleagues administered nicotine to a genetically engineered strain of mice that develops Alzheimer's disease.
  • Nicotine treatment produced an increase in nicotine receptors in the animals' brains that correlated with a dramatic rise in the aggregation and activity of the tau protein.
  • This indicates that the disease-causing effects of tau were worsened, the team reports in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
  • Moreover, in these experiments, chronic nicotine administration had no effect on levels of soluble amyloid, the researchers point out.
  • The results emphasize the importance of assessing nicotine's affects on all aspects of the disease, they write.
  • "Our findings suggest that the use of nicotine as a potential therapy for Alzheimer's disease should be reevaluated."
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This video animation shows how beta amyloid plaques are created in Alzheimer's patients and how they affect the progress of the disease.

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