Alzheimer's disease and Schnabel's new book

From: Damien Broderick (damien@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Wed Feb 17 1999 - 03:46:44 MST


At 11:54 AM 2/16/99 +0100, Anders wrote:

>"Murray Propes" <MPropes@wpsmtp.siumed.edu> writes:

>> Hello All, I just completed a two week Alheimer's disease clinic
>> elective. After speaking to several neuropathologists who feel that
>> Alzheimers disease is an inevitable fate for all that live long enough

>People are discovering new stuff
>about the disease quite quickly right now, and especially the
>properties of the beta-amyloid precursor protein are fascinating

Especially fascinating and rewarding is Jim Schnabel's wonderful new book
FOREVER YOUNG: SCIENCE AND THE SEARCH FOR IMMORTALITY, London: Bloomsbury,
1998. The first half is an enthralling New Yorker-style essay on the
embattled quests by Drs Jim Rogers and Pat McGreer, and eventually Dennis
Selkoe (who might get a Nobel for this work, I guess), in tracking down the
ways in which beta amyloids do their dirty work.

Jim Schnabel wrote several absolutely delightful earlier books about fields
at the margins of science and lunacy, which are carefully not cited
anywhere in the PR for this latest one, notably DARK WHITE about UFO
abduction claims and REMOTE VIEWERS about military and CIA experiments in
psi/spying.

He also wrote an early New Scientist paper (19 June 1993, pp. 22-6) on
Rogers' theory that Alzheimers' is basically a result of massive
auto-immune inflammation of the brain, an `arthritis of the brain', which
might be halted by judicious use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs,
and eventually by a targeted drug like those that in the lab inhibit the
injurious cleaving of the precursor APP to yield beta amyloid.

Two such drugs start human clinical trials this year in Athena and Lilly
labs. `If everything goes well,' writes Schnabel, `larger-scale trials
will start [2000]. And, let's hope, a drug to prevent amyloid accumulation
- and thus, perhaps, Alzheimer's disease - will be available at pharmacies
around 2004' (p. 79).

No cause for despair in all this!

Damien Broderick



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:03:04 MST