Alzheimer's Advance: Omega-3 fatty acid benefits mice
Wellness Trader - Home of Natural Remedies Memory-Loss.com
Home divider Memory Loss divider Short Term divider Causes divider Lipitor and Memory Loss divider Sudden Memory Loss divider Depression and Memory Loss divider Aging and Memory Loss
Supplements divider Alcohol and Memory Loss divider Treatments divider Menopause divider Long Term divider Vitamins divider Early Memory Loss divider Seizure divider Prevention divider Stroke divider Ambien and Memory Loss
Natural Rewards On Sale! Testimonials
left end of buttonNatural Remediesright end of button
left end of buttonTell A Friendright end of button
1-800-969-7228 View Cart Check Out Login Signup
My Account
User Info | View Cart
Checkout
Signup for newsletter
Signup as a new user
Site Info
How To Order
Shipping Information
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
5 Star Guarantee
Alzheimer's Advance: Omega-3 fatty acid benefits mice

A diet that includes a key omega-3 fatty acid found in fish and canola oil prevents some memory loss in mice that develop a disease similar to Alzheimer's, researchers report in the Sept. 2 Neuron.

The finding is consistent with previous research suggesting that fish oil supplements might reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease in people. Other work has shown that the fatty acid, called docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), is essential to brain function and that Alzheimer's patients have low concentrations of it in their blood.

The early memory and learning problems that mark the disease occur because damaged brain cells fail to transmit messages consistently to each other across junctions called synapses.

To assess what role DHA might have in maintaining this transmission, Greg M. Cole, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and his colleagues used old mice—17 months on average—that were genetically engineered to develop waxy protein plaques in their brains, much as Alzheimer's patients do.

Some mice received food without DHA for 103 days and subsequently showed depleted stores of DHA in their brains. In contrast, mice getting chow supplemented with DHA had high brain concentrations of the fatty acid. Notably, these animals maintained good concentrations of two proteins that enable synapses to function, but DHA-deficient mice had insufficient concentrations of those substances.

Commenting on the study, nutritionist Julie A. Conquer of the University of Guelph in Ontario says that these results show that DHA in the diet can affect the biochemistry of brain-signaling pathways.

Cole and his team also tested memory in elderly mice that had received food with or without DHA for nearly 5 months. They trained the 21-month-old mice to swim to a platform in a tank of warm water, then raised the water level to submerge the platform slightly. Because the platform was no longer directly visible, the mice had to remember where it was, on the basis of visual clues positioned around the tank.

After a week of practice, the mice getting DHA took 20 to 30 seconds to find the hidden platform. Their counterparts not receiving DHA took 50 seconds or more. Some mice in the latter group didn't appear to recall where the platform was at all, swimming around the edge of the tank until being fished out, says study coauthor Sally A. Frautschy, a neurobiologist at UCLA. She adds that normal mice, once trained, can find the hidden platform in about 10 seconds.

"This is spatial memory, like trying to remember where you parked your car," she says. "That's memory you lose in Alzheimer's disease."

Conquer says that research into omega-3 fatty acids in Alzheimer's disease is now taking two tracks. Studies on the biological track, which include the new work by Cole and his colleagues, seek to clarify how the fatty acids affect brain function. The other research approach centers on monitoring the course of disease in newly diagnosed Alzheimer's patients taking or not taking fatty acid supplements.

Among the outstanding questions is the role of the waxy plaques, made of the short protein amyloid beta, in Alzheimer's. Cole hypothesizes that an accumulation of the substance causes oxidative damage to DHA.

http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040904/fob3.asp





BUY NOW!
 
The Lowdown on Gingko Biloba: The Other "Brain Boosters" - Older adults have shown a strong interest in over-the-counter "brain booste...
Looking to protect your memory? - New study shows common spice could protect against memory loss...
East meets West: A new memory enhancing drug - Blacksburg, Va., August 22, 2000 -- Huperzine A, a compound isolated from t...
Study: Memory Loss Is Second Greatest Health Fear Among Americans - St. Louis, Missouri (AHN) - A study released Saturday reveals that memory l...
Memory herb - The herb called Bacopa monniera, or brahmi, is a plant that grows in marshy...
Alzheimer's Advance: Omega-3 fatty acid benefits mice - A diet that includes a key omega-3 fatty acid found in fish and canola oil ...
That old forgotten feeling - With 20 per cent of us facing Alzheimer's in old age, pharmaceutical compan...
Huperzine: Supplement makers turn over a new - In search of the next hot natural cognitive enhancer, supplement makers are...
More News

Home | Natural Remedies | Discussion Board | Discussion Board Guidelines

How to Order | Shipping Information | Shopping Cart | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Site Map

Earn Free Products with Natural Rewards

To Order Call: 1-800-969-7228
$6.95 Flat Shipping per order UPS Ground 2-5 Biz Days

Terms of Use and Disclaimer | ©2007 Wellness Trader | US FDA Disclaimer

5-htp.org | acetyl-lcarnitine.com | alpha-lipoic-acid.com | anxietyremedy.com | arginmaxdirect.com | bacopa-monniera.com
blueberryextract.com | bromelain.net | coq10supplement.com | curcumin.net | depressionremedy.com | diabetes-remedy.com
dmae.org | dryeyesyndrome.net | enlargedprostateremedy.com | fish-oil-supplements.com | green-tea-extract.com | guggul.net
gymnema.net | high-triglycerides.com | highbloodpressureremedy.com | huperzine.net | immune-boosters.com | inflammationremedy.com
L-tryptophan.org | loweringcholesterol.net | migraineremedy.com | MSM-supplement.com | natto-nattokinase.com | naturalcosmeticstore.com
naturalpetshop.com | naturalshaving.com | osteoarthritisremedy.com | pantethine.net | policosanol.net | redyeastrice.org
sam-e-supplement.com | sleepremedy.com | stjohnswortextract.com | theanine.net | wellnesstrader.com

Major Credit Cards Accepted Identity of WellnessTrader.com is verified by GeoCerts.