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Related: About this forumNew study shows Alzheimer's disease can be reversed to achieve full neurological recovery--not just prevented or slowed--i
December 23, 2025
For more than a century, people have considered Alzheimer's disease (AD) an irreversible illness. Consequently, research has focused on preventing or slowing it, rather than recovery. Despite billions of dollars spent on decades of research, there has never been a clinical trial of any drug to reverse and recover from AD.
A research team from Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals (UH) and the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center has now challenged this long-held dogma in the field, testing whether brains already badly afflicted with advanced AD could recover.
The study, led by Kalyani Chaubey, from the Pieper Laboratory, was published online Dec. 22 in Cell Reports Medicine. Using diverse preclinical mouse models and analysis of human AD brains, the team showed that the brains failure to maintain normal levels of a central cellular energy molecule, NAD+, is a major driver of AD, and that maintaining proper NAD+ balance can prevent and even reverse the disease.
NAD+ levels decline naturally across the body, including the brain, as people age. Without proper NAD+ balance, cells eventually become unable to execute many of the critical processes required for proper functioning and survival. In this study, the team showed that the decline in NAD+ is even more severe in the brains of people with AD, and that this same phenomenon also occurs in mouse models of the disease.
Snip
https://case.edu/news/new-study-shows-alzheimers-disease-can-be-reversed-achieve-full-neurological-recovery-not-just-prevented-or-slowed-animal-models
bucolic_frolic
(53,874 posts)Nice that medicine advances.
Google "how to get more nad+"
It's all there.
KLK1972
(14 posts)OTC NAD+ at therapeutic levels (high enough to produce this effect) promotes cancer. Also important to note, this is a preclinical trial, without human testing yet. It is a promising first step though!
COL Mustard
(7,950 posts)That Trump might return to normalcy? Damn, thats frightening.
Rendville
(158 posts)NAD+
What helps regeneration? A specific diet regime? Yoga/Tai Chi? Walking? Meditation?
Raw Juicing?
KLK1972
(14 posts)Exercise activates an enzyme that stimulates NAD+ recycling. Sleep is also important! Supplements are not recommended.
Irish_Dem
(79,482 posts)How much sleep?
From what i've read, at least 6 hours a night.
Also, I suspect any amount of exercise would do.
Enough to strengthen the core and the glutes
which helps stability and prevents falls...
and enough for cardiovascular strength and
circulation.
Irish_Dem
(79,482 posts)At my age, I'm just grateful for what I can do.
So far, so good.
Irish_Dem
(79,482 posts)Nigrum Cattus
(1,205 posts)I take NMN, not NAD+ because it works better for me
also, NADH
https://www.rollingstone.com/product-recommendations/lifestyle/best-nmn-supplements-1235476999/
Fiendish Thingy
(21,903 posts)Lets see a double blind controlled study with Alzheimers patients before we pop the cork on the champagne.
hlthe2b
(112,686 posts)Martin68
(26,978 posts)merely slows down or ameliorates the degenerative process, but an outright "cure" based on the production of one molecule sounds dubious to me.
stopdiggin
(14,964 posts)but the claims of 'full functioning reversal' - are completely over-wrought - i.e. unfounded.
and that deserves being knocked back a step.
hlthe2b
(112,686 posts)and non-AD control comparisons with very strict exclusion criteria so as to avoid confounding factors, like cerebral vascular disease, moderate to severe cardiac insufficiency or other chronic health conditions that likewise influence brain function and thus response to NAD+ in their study. While a healthy population (especially those with early onset Alzheimer's) is out there and likewise in need of interventions, it may be difficult to extrapolate these findings--even with further validation--to the majority of AD patients (or those identified to be most at risk), depending on how well and how early their concomitant additional health issues are identified and treated.
Still, a positive development that bears watching once human studies become available (while taking the qualifiers above into account).
TheRickles
(3,136 posts)It's a promising development, but nowhere near the implied reversal of Alzheimers (as other commenters have also noted).
Progressive dog
(7,568 posts)I recently read a Scientific American article on how Alzheimer's might be due to slowed clearing of waste from the brain.
There are a lot of new theories trying to explain why getting rid of the amyloid plaques of Alzheimer's does not reverse the disease or even halt it's progression substantially.
LiberalArkie
(19,225 posts)anything below that nerve was gone. That the muscle or feeling would never return.
GreatGazoo
(4,433 posts)Dirt cheap, heavily tested and used.
https://www.kumc.edu/about/news/news-archive/creatine-alzheimers-research.html
multigraincracker
(36,888 posts)Helps with depression too. Been studied for over 50 years. Not so good for those with kidney disease.
GreatGazoo
(4,433 posts)after I saw the studies about jet lag and creatine. It worked right away for me. Life changing because I have had sleep issues that made me foggy in the morning.
I do the compressed pills, 3-gram. Makes it easy to carry and be consistent.
LiberalArkie
(19,225 posts)TheRickles
(3,136 posts)Sogo
(6,967 posts)Thanks for posting this!
progressoid
(52,532 posts)tinrobot
(11,943 posts)Hopefully, they can replicate this in humans.
Until they do, let's not get too excited.
snowybirdie
(6,552 posts)Maybe some day.........What is available is problematic. Who is aware that the two drugs to slow ALZ, , kisunla and Lequembi, have serious side effects such as brain bleed and stroke? And improvement is only 25-30%? I cringe seeing them now heavily promoted on tv with the downside not really mentioned except said quickly without anyone understanding at the end of the commercial.
wolfie001
(7,017 posts)More "Green Powder Elixirs" in a glass of water every am incoming. $50 for a month's supply.
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P.S.- I know the quote hasn't been proven to ever be said by PT so no need to elucidate that.
NNadir
(37,235 posts)...release, notably in medicine, but widely found with respect to energy "breakthroughs."
Alzheimer's is a very tragic disease, and regrettably, its history is littered with scientific announcements of "breakthroughs" that have not panned out.
In at least one case - and I'm not implying this is the case here - a "breakthrough" was found to consist entirely of scientific fraud.
It is very difficult to ascertain what behaviors in a mouse display "full recovery."
I covered this case elsewhere here; books have been written on it.
Some remarks on purported fraud concerned with αβ oligomer hypothesis in Alzheimer's research.
There has been some criticism of the tone of Charles Piller's article in Science, as well as his book expanding on the article, Doctored Fraud, Arrogance, and Tragedy in the Quest to Cure Alzheimer's
Criticism by an Alzheimer's researcher of Piller's book and claims can be found here: Fraud, arrogance, and tragedy: the case of Doctored
Alzheimer's is a terrible and generally intractable disease; as a scientist, I certainly applaud research. I am too old though, and have lived too long, to jump up and down with joy every time a "breakthrough" is announced. I have worked for much of my life in support of drug development and am aware of pitfalls - huge pitfalls - that occur along the way to medical treatments. This is not to say that some them don't work; obviously they do, but the road is long, painful, and littered with failure.
Irish_Dem
(79,482 posts)He wants them to drop dead as soon as possible.
IA8IT
(6,335 posts)Zero faith a cure will be found when treatment is so profitable.
flashman13
(1,981 posts)Upthevibe
(10,001 posts)Thanks for your post.
I just started taking Creatine a few weeks ago as recommended by two of my good friends. Since June, I've lost 40-50 lbs! I've been taking the weight loss injections (Zepbound) off and on, and it's been amazing. I've completely changed what I eat, and I go to the gym about five days a week.
Exercise/working out is everything people say it is! I feel great afterwards and basically most of the time. I'm hearing more and more that it also helps with cognition.
Thanks again!