Intuition

Reducing complex health cures to simple do it yourself remedies. Look your best, feel good, be healthy and live longer from just knowing what to eat to effect a cure and maintain good health. No mention of bad habits because you know what they are already!

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

B vitamin possible cure for Alzheimer’s

One out of every eight Americans gets it, and 47% of those who reach 85 years of age have it. Up to now Alzheimer’s was a disease without a remedy. Sure, there are nutritional or drug based substances that slow the symptoms, but if nothing else killed you Alzheimer’s would over a period of time.

Up until recently Alzheimer’s patients took medications just to be able to dress, bathe, use a phone, and other basic necessary functions by themselves a while longer. A team of researchers from the University of California, Irvine, has announced the discovery of a true cure for Alzheimer’s. The best part of this cure is it’s cheap and widely accessible. The cure is vitamin B3, nicotinamide, or more commonly referred to as niacin amide.

Kim Green, Ph.D., director of the team at the University of California, Irvine, bought a year’s supply of niacin amide for $30 and stirred it into the drinking water of forty lab mice, half of which were specially bred to get Alzheimer’s disease.

After treating the mice for only four months, he discovered what should have been front-page news in every city in the world. Cognitively, they were cured, said Dr. Green. They performed as if they had never developed the disease.

All the researchers in the study were both astonished and excited. Rarely do you hear researchers using the word "Cured", but that’s exactly what happened.

At the end of the study, the diseased mice that were treated with niacin amide performed just as well in memory tests as healthy mice! The niacin amide not only protected their brains from further memory loss, but incredibly, it also restored lost memory function. Human trials are under way.

The earliest indicator of coming Alzheimer’s may not be a memory test at all, but a test of your sense of balance.

Dr. Kaufman often tested the impact of niacin amide on balance, and my colleague Julian Whitaker, M.D., editor of Health & Healing, uses it as a test of aging. Borrowing a bit from both of them, here is how you can test yourself:

1. Stand on an uncarpeted floor barefoot or in low-heeled shoes. Close your eyes and balance on your right foot. Slowly draw the heel of your left foot up to where it touches your right kneecap. Don’t wave your arms for balance; just see how long you can stand there. (If you’re accident-prone, have somebody to catch you.)

2. Do the same standing on your left foot.

3. Repeat #1 and #2.

Then average your four scores.

The average by age group is:

Your Age – Seconds
Up to 20 – 30
30 to 39 – 25
40 to 49 – 15
50 to 59 – 10
60 to 69 – 7
70+ – 5

Why such a large difference between ages? It is because certain nerve fibres in your spinal column tell your brain the location and angle of each joint in your body…but if you stop assimilating enough B vitamins, the fibres eventually stop sending their messages upstairs, and that is definitely a pre-Alzheimer’s condition

Lucinda Ball 02/02/2011

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