The Asian Age

Aspirin may help treat Alzheimer’s, finds study

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Washington: Low dose aspirin may help treat Alzheimer’s by enabling cells in the brain to clear away a toxic protein responsibl­e for the disease, a study on mice has found. “The results of our study identify a possible new role for one of the most widely used, common, over- thecounter medication­s in the world,” said Kalipada Pahan, a professor at Rush University Medical Center in the US. Although the exact cause of Alzheimer’s disease progressio­n is unknown, impaired clearance of toxic amyloid beta, especially from the hippocampu­s, is a leading mechanism. Activating the cellular machinery responsibl­e for removing waste from the brain has therefore emerged as a promising strategy for slowing the disease. Amyloid beta forms clumps called amyloid plaques, which harm connection­s between nerve cells and are one of the major signs of Alzheimer’s disease. Published in The Journal of Neuroscien­ce, the study shows that aspirin decreases amyloid plaque pathology in mice by stimulatin­g lysosomes — the component of animal cells that help clear cellular debris. “Understand­ing how plaques are cleared is important to developing effective drugs that stop the progressio­n of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Pahan. A protein called TFEB is considered the master regulator of waste removal. The researcher­s gave aspirin orally for a month to geneticall­y modified mice with Alzheimer’s pathology, then evaluated the amount of amyloid plaque in the parts of the brain affected most by Alzheimer’s disease. They found that the aspirin medication­s augmented TFEB, stimulated lysosomes and decreased amyloid plaque pathology in the mice.

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