May 12, 2011

Two Devices Treat Alzheimer's

Pharmaceutical companies developing Alzheimer's drugs have faced one hurdle after another. The most effective treatments are difficult to get into the brain, while those that show success in animals have yet to benefit humans.
Two startup companies aim to solve these problems by targeting the brain electrically rather than chemically. They're both using technologies that have proven successful for other brain disorders. One company plans to use deep brain stimulation, which has been used to treat tens of thousands of Parkinson's patients. The other hopes to find success with transcranial magnetic stimulation, a noninvasive approach used to treat depression and as a research tool to stimulate or inhibit specific parts of the brain.
In deep brain stimulation, electrical pulses are delivered to a dysfunctional part of the brain via a surgically implanted electrode, stimulating neural activity.  The technology is being used or tested for a growing number of disorders, including medication resistant epilepsy, depression, and obsessive compulsive disorder. Neurosurgeon Andres Lozano, at the University of Toronto, became interested in its potential for treating Alzheimer's thanks to an unexpected finding published in 2008. Researchers were testing to see if they could help a morbidly obese patient lose weight by stimulating a part of the brain that governs satiety. Follow-up tests revealed that the patient showed a significant improvement in memory.
Brain imaging revealed that the obesity treatment activated various brain structures involved in memory. Such structures have typically deteriorated in Alzheimer's patients, and Lozano's idea is to use deep brain stimulation to boost activity in the memory circuits that patients have left. Late last year, Lozano formed startup Functional Neuromodulation with Daniel O'Connell, founder of Neuroventures and now its CEO, to commercialize the technology.
It's still unclear how well the approach will work in people with the neurodegenerative disorder. A small study published last fall showed mixed results. The treatment appeared to slow cognitive decline in a few patients, but had no effect in others. However, researchers did find that deep brain stimulation reversed one of the markers of Alzheimer's: impaired glucose metabolism in the brain. Preliminary evidence suggests that it is more effective when used at earlier stages of the disease.

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