Treating patients of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) with a diabetes drug may improve their learning and memory function, reveals a study.
Alzheimer’s is a progressive disease that destroys memory and other important mental functions.
Researchers from Boston University Medical Center in Massachusetts found that treatment with the diabetes drug – amylin (or pramlintide) – safely improve learning and memory function in AD patients and is reducing the typical behavior of the disease in their brains.
“A single injection of pramlintide into our patients was well tolerated and reduced the amyloid burden as well as lowered the concentrations of amyloid-ß peptides, a major component of AD in the brain,” said corresponding study author Wendy Qiu.
“Our study suggests a potential role for the creation of a blood test that relies on pramlintide, which could cross the blood-brain barrier and help to translocate the biomarkers related to AD pathology including amyloid-ß peptides and neuroinflammation, from the brain into the bloodstream where they can be detected,” added Qiu.
The findings, appeared in the Journal Translational Research and Clinical Interventions, also may lead to the development of a blood test for AD.
Currently, lumbar punctures – the procedure of taking fluid from the spine in the lower back through a hollow needle – to detect biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid and positron emission tomography imaging scans are used to diagnose AD.
(Except the title PHAF Team did not change the body of article. It is as it is published on Business Standard.)
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