Sunday, December 26, 2021

Dr Rudy Tanzi lecture on Alzheimers Part 2

 Slides from Dr Tanzi you tube link

Important point:


A teaching moment


I had abundant amyloid plaque on my Pet scan but my neurologist gave me the diagnosis of Alzheimers based on having one gene for AZ and serial cognitive exams. 



Drug therapy and trials have concentrated on getting rid of the amyloid plaque with limited results. Link to new drug


Dr Dale Bredesen concentrates on treating the inflammation with shotgun therapy.  Last year I gave it a try. Atma Holistic link

I seem to be doing well on all the supplements



Dr Tanzi does not get into supplements in his slide. 

Support for supplements link

Supplements advised by Issacson link


However there are basic lifestyles changes that most advise. 




















Advanced slide on AZ drug







Friday, December 17, 2021

Dr Rudy Tanzi lecture Part one


 

Worth watching One hour you tube on AZ link

I will enters excerpts of many of Dr Tanzi slides if you difficulty following the you tube below

ONE


 Alzheimers starts decade before symptoms

Two 

The first case of Alzheimers

"O God I have lost myself"

"If you don't know where you are or when you are and you have Alzheimers, it is one of the most horrific things that can happen to a person."  Dr Tanzia


What is the self ? : 














Thursday, December 9, 2021

Kevin Maki Podcast on lipids

                 ,,.,,      ,.

Continued Controversy Over Saturated Fat Intake and Cardiovascular Health

Several reviews were published recently that offered different viewpoints about the relationship between intake of saturated fatty acids (SFA), which increases

 low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and 

apolipoprotein (Apo) B,

 and cardiovascular health.1-6 

 In response to these papers, Kevin C. Maki, PhD, along with two of his colleagues, Carol F. Kirkpatrick, PhD, MPH, RDN and Mary R. Dicklin, PhD, prepared a commentary that was published in Journal of Clinical Lipidology in which they discussed the viewpoints and proposed tentative conclusions about SFA intake and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk.7  

Briefly, the two sides of the argument are

1) that SFA intake should be minimized based on evidence that replacing SFA with unsaturated fatty acids, particularly polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), reduces ASCVD events vs. 

2) that the quality of the evidence base is weak and there are few data to support an ASCVD benefit from reducing SFA intake in healthy populations.

 Furthermore, some have disagreed about the atherogenicity of the type of LDL-C that is increased by consuming SFA, i.e., cholesterol carried in larger, more buoyant particles.8  There is, however, general agreement that a cardioprotective dietary pattern that emphasizes the quality of foods is more important than specific nutrients and that the food matrix in which SFA are consumed likely affects their impacts on ASCVD risk factors.6

Data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of SFA and cardiovascular risk are, unfortunately, somewhat limited and often difficult to interpret due to the small size, relatively short duration, and time at which the trials were conducted, i.e., prior to current dietary practices and in populations with different prevalence of important risk factors, such as smoking and obesity. 

 Nevertheless, meta-analysis results are suggestive of cardiovascular benefit by reducing SFA intake,9

 and in their review of the data an Expert Panel organized by the American Heart Association in 2017 concluded that replacing a portion of daily SFA in the average American diet with unsaturated fats (PUFA and monounsaturated fatty acids [MUFA]) as part of a healthy dietary pattern would be expected to reduce ASCVD risk.10  

There is a larger body of evidence from observational studies examining the relation between SFA and cardiovascular outcomes.

 Based on these data, modeling substitution of 5% of energy from SFA with 5% of energy from MUFA was associated with 15% lower ASCVD risk,

replacement with PUFA was associated with 25% lower risk, and

 replacement with carbohydrate from whole grains was associated with  9% lower risk.11

Results from well-designed feeding trials have shown that decreasing SFA intake to amounts less than those consumed in an average American diet reduces LDL-C and Apo B concentrations to degrees that would be expected to reduce risk of ASCVD if maintained for an extended duration. 

 For example, if 5% of total daily energy from SFA was replaced with PUFA, this would be expected to lower LDL-C by 10.6 mg/dL, which could potentially reduce coronary heart disease risk by as much as 18%, if maintained for decades.12,13 

 Some have suggested that the possible benefits of lowering LDL-C by decreasing SFA intake are overestimated, since there is a preferential reduction of larger, more cholesterol-rich LDL particles, rather than smaller, more dense LDL particles that have a stronger association with ASCVD risk.8  

However, the authors of the commentary cited evidence to support their position that this LDL subspecies shift does not downgrade the benefit of reducing SFA intake.  

The association of LDL size loses statistical significance when adjusted for Apo B or LDL particle concentration.14  

Furthermore, statin therapy preferentially reduces larger LDL subspecies 

while also reducing ASCVD risk, and 

patients with familial hypercholesterolemia have primarily large, buoyant LDL particles, but are also at high risk of ASCVD.15


There are several additional biologically plausible biomarkers and pathways that could be related to an association between increased SFA intake and increased ASCVD risk, such as:

 1-inflammatory markers, 

2-hemostatic factors,

3- Apo C3 production, 

4-cardiac rhythms,

4- membrane fluidity, and 

5-high-density lipoprotein function,

 but the authors of the editorial concluded that additional clinical research is needed regarding these as potential mediators before firm conclusions are appropriate.7

The results from RCTs examining LDL-C and Apo B as biomarkers of ASCVD, 

the limited evidence base from RCTs of dietary interventions in which ASCVD outcomes were evaluated, and 

findings from prospective observational studies are in alignment with regard to the adverse effects of SFA on ASCVD risk relative to unsaturated fatty acids.  

Thus, the authors concluded that, in their view, the evidence supports the current recommendation to limit SFA intake to <10% of total dietary energy for the general healthy population, and to limit it further in patients with hypercholesterolemia.16


Monday, December 6, 2021

Feeling Good in my fifth year of Alzehimers


 I love my mornings link 

I have a great deal of contentment for my achievements in writing most of all from

 blogs and twitter link. 

Total Pageviews today Dec 6. I had two days of more than 200 hits. 

011
144
210
317
418
515
624
741
835
923
1010
1145
1227
1325
1427
1522
1614
179
1818
1915
2031
2120
2230
2354
2420
2541
2646
2724
2877
2999

 201,056 twelve days after hitting 200,000.

I have hopes of eventually hitting a tipping point with social media. 


  Handling Inevitable anxiety of Alzheimers link


The Mantra of tranquility, serenity and peace link


My big accomplishment gave me great satisfaction link


My Newfoundland dog link

 

I was having a great day until...  link


I avoid boredom by watching TV series.

We just finished watching the sixth and final 

season of A Place to Call Home.


The other thing I am doing is reading all the Richard Sharpe Series of books
 by Bernard Cornwall again.















update trials of Alzheimers

 The best part of the day is when I have a bowel movement.   Recently started Miralax. I found MOM too harsh. Pacing helps but I get exhaust...