Scientists Looking at Brain Stimulation as a Possible Treatment for Alzheimer’s
Sending electronic pulses through a brain that is being
damaged by Alzheimer’s disease might become a new method of early treatment.
A study headed by Dr. Andres Lozano at Toronto Western
Hospital’s Krembil Neuroscience Centre in Canada, has concluded that patients
over the age of 65 with mild Alzheimer’s disease can benefit from deep brainstimulation.
Deep brain stimulation is nothing new but using it as a more
targeted therapy could yield dividends.
“Deep brain stimulation (DBS) implants have been used for
over 30 years, mostly to treat the tremors of Parkinson’s disease patients,”
Dr. Doug Scharre, director of the Division of Cognitive Neurology at The Ohio
State University Wexner Medical Centre, told Healthline.
Scharre notes that while DBS treatment is approved by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Parkinson’s disease, it’s still an
experimental therapy when it comes to Alzheimer’s.
To know more about the current research on #Alzheimer's Disease, join us at the International #Conference on #Alzheimers, Dementia and Related #Neurodegenerative Diseases which is scheduled on #December 03-04, 2018 at #Madrid, Spain
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