Sarah Ford | September 19, 2013
Diabetes Drug Improves Memory in Mice That Were Engineered to Show Features of Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease
A commonly prescribed diabetes drug could improve memory and reverse the build-up of plaques on the brain linked to Alzheimer鈥檚, according to research published in Neuropharmacology.
Results from the Alzheimer鈥檚 Society-funded study, led by Professor Christian H枚lscher who is now at Lancaster University, show that the drug liraglutide might be able to reverse some of the damage caused by Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, even in the later stages of the condition.
Mice with late-stage Alzheimer鈥檚 given the drug performed significantly better on an object recognition test and their brains showed a 30 per cent reduction in the build-up of toxic plaques.
Most drugs that show promising effects in dementia do so at an early stage of the disease; these results from a more advanced stage of Alzheimer鈥檚 will provide hope that this drug could be of benefit for people in the moderate to severe stages too.
This study demonstrates the drug鈥檚 potential to reverse the changes in the brain caused by the condition.
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