| Looking to protect your memory?
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2001-12-05 Colette Bouchez
New research shows this zesty staple of
Indian fare, which puts the zing in curry sauces, may protect you
from the memory loss and eventual mental decline of Alzheimer's
disease.
The key appears to lie in a chemical
compound called curcumin, which is found in turmeric. Researchers say
curcumin reduces inflammation caused by a buildup of a protein known
as beta-amyloid, a plaque-like substance that blocks brain cells from
communicating with each other and eventually affects your ability to
remember. Accumulations of beta-amyloid plaques are linked to
Alzheimer's disease.
"We believe curcumin will do three
important things: trigger clearance of amyloid already present;
reverse oxidative damage contributing to memory loss, [and] reduce
toxic substances associated with chronic inflammation," says
Sally Frautschy, study co-author and associate professor of medicine
and neurology at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).
All three actions, she says, work
together to protect the ability of brain cells to communicate with
one another, which is key in the preservation of memory.
But why single out turmeric, or more
specifically curcumin? One reason is because the rate of Alzheimer's
disease in India is extremely low -- in many instances, less than 1
percent of people over age 65 are affected. Many believe it is their
high dietary intake of turmeric that accounts for the low incidence
of disease.
In America, about 3 percent of people
between the ages of 65 and 74 have Alzheimer's, and half of those 85
or older have it, according to the National Institutes of Health.
"The study [suggests] that there
may be a dietary factor in the Indian diet that makes [this group]
have the lowest incidence [of Alzheimer's disease] in the world. One
such substance may be curcumin," says Frautschy.
Nutrition experts are intrigued by the
finding and agree with the premise.
"Curcumin has been shown to have
anti-inflammatory properties and, at least theoretically, it could
have the power to reduce inflammation in the brain. And that, in
turn, may reduce the risk of Alzheimer's," says Jyni Hollander,
a nutritionist and registered dietician at New York University
Medical Center.
For the animal study, Frautschy and her
colleagues injected amyloid proteins into the brains of aged mice to
create conditions like those that exist in patients with Alzheimer's.
Some mice were then fed a diet high in curcumin, others got a diet
low in curcumin. Their brain tissue was later analyzed for
inflammation, damage and plaque formation.
What the researchers found: On either
diet, the mice had a significant reduction in the build up of amyloid
proteins in the tiny spaces between brain cells -- the areas that
affect cellular communication linked to memory. The memory function
was validated using memory-dependant maze tests.
"We suspect that curcumin is
enhancing the inflammatory clearance of the toxic amyloid, while
blunting chronic inflammation," says Frautschy.
In previous studies anti-inflammatory
drugs such as ibuprofen (Motrin) had similar effects. The problem,
however, was that the chronic use of these drugs dramatically
increased the risk of toxic side effects. Frautschy says she was
searching for a way to duplicate the anti-inflammatory effects of the
drug without the toxic reactions -- and that's when she turned to
curcumin.
"It has been known for thousands
of years in Ayurvedic medicine that turmeric extracts were beneficial
for inflammatory conditions such as arthritis -- [and] since the
'60s, there have been hundreds of publications on the mechanisms of
anti-inflammatory effects of curcumin," says Frautschy.
Believing it could have the same
anti-inflammatory effects on the brain as it does in the joints, she
put the spice to the test -- and it passed with flying colors.
"Unlike ibuprofen, curcumin has
the additional benefit of reducing oxidative damage of the brain,
which is several-fold elevated in Alzheimer's disease and likely
contributes greatly to memory loss," says Frautschy.
Hollander believes the potential for
this tasty spice looms large. "If the animal results translate
to human results, it could be a very exciting, natural alternative
method of protecting the brain from this devastating illness,"
she says.
Frautschy presented her findings at the
recent annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in San Diego,
Calif.
And her research just received a boost
of support when an unrelated group of scientists offered evidence
that her theories about inflammation are right on target.
In a new study published in the
December issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, a group of California scientists showed that, even when
plaque didn't form in the brain, soluble forms of amyloid created
inflammation that they believe contributes to the memory loss and
eventual dementia of Alzheimer's disease.
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