University Home | Hospital | Pulse Employment | Contact Us | Search | News 
Thomas Jefferson University Search Jefferson
Jefferson Medical College Jefferson College of Graduate Studies Jefferson College of Health Professions
Menu

For Patients & Families > Specific Diseases > Alzheimer's Disease > Understanding the Amyloid Connection > Superactivating the Good Pathway

 

Superactivating the Good Pathway

In recent years, research has revealed several lines of evidence to support the hypothesis that cholesterol plays a role in Alzheimer’s. One of these is the finding from population-based observational studies that people who take cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins have a considerably lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s. Research in experimental animals has shown that statins reduce beta amyloid accumulation in the brain, but only at doses that far exceed those taken by people for cholesterol control. Because high doses carry significant risks, scientists are trying to find a way to stimulate these effects using lower doses of statins.

Toward that end, researchers have dug deep inside nerve cells to unravel the chain of events through which statin drugs interact with beta amyloid. They have learned that statins activate the good pathway of amyloid processing, stimulating the production of harmless amyloid at the expense of the toxic form.

The research does not indicate that people should start to take statins now for Alzheimer's, but it suggests exciting new directions for future research.

 

Continue

Go Back

 

 




 Printable Version

Thomas Jefferson University
Farber Institute for Neurosciences