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Major news in the
research on Alzheimer's
Possible Cure For Memory Loss Or Alzheimer's Disease is very close
New Weapons Available For Those Afflicted
Two Nobel Prize Winners Are Hot On The Trail To A Breakthrough
May 2005, Clarksburg,MD -Researchers funded by the Alzheimer's Disease
Research including TWO Nobel Prize winners--have made breakthrough
discoveries that may signal the end of the Alzheimer's reign of terror!
Thanks to the biggest research breakthroughs since Alzheimer's was
discovered in 1906, we may be at the end of this horrible disease said
Dr Brian K. Regan, Ph.D.
Dr. Stanley Prusiner won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1997 for his
discovery of a new class of disease-causing agents called prions. The
study of prions may unlock the final mysteries of the disease process of
Alzheimer's.
The 2000 Nobel prize in Medicine went to Dr. Paul Greene and two other
researchers for their groundbreaking discoveries of the mechanisms by
which the brain cells transfer information from one to the other.
The direction is clear according to Dr.Brian K. Regan,Ph.D, All we need
is the funding to go there. And the sooner we do, the fewer people will
suffer and die.
Alzheimer's disease claims a new victim every two minutes and kills
another American every six minutes.
Experts predict that the number of Alzheimer victims could reach 14
million in the next in the next 50 years. Already one in three families
is affected by Alzheimer's disease, but if this trend is not broken, one
out of every two baby boomers may develop Alzheimer's as they enter
their senior years.
Fruits and vegetable juices, clean gums can defend against disease;
tests being discovered that can spot Alzheimer's 9 years prior to first
symptoms appearing.
The race to prevent Alzheimer's has taken on an urgency as the number of
Americans with the disease is expected to soar in the coming decades
said the Associated Press article of June 20,2005.
Amy Borenstein of the University of South Florida College of Public
health studied more than 11131 people and found that those who drank
fruit or vegetable juice three times or more a week were four times less
likely to develop Alzheimer's late in life than people who rarely or
never drank juice.
For more information for the news that is subject to this release click on the www.healthymemory.net. Information compiled from the Alzheimers Disease Reseach.
About the Author
The authors Dad contracted memory loss
symptoms 10 years ago. The website is an accumulation of practical
techniques, vitamins, drugs, memory drills and caregiver ways that have
helped extend the life of a man he loved.
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