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Published on: October 18, 2012
by Business Standard:
Giving middle-aged people a transfusion of young blood could keep their brains healthy in old age and delay the onset of diseases like Alzheimer’s, according to a new study.
Researchers from the Stanford University found that filtering younger blood into an older body could rejuvenate old tissue and keep nerve cells in good working order, scientists have claimed.
People in their 40s or 50s could in future be given blood donated by someone in their early twenties to prevent their brain from deteriorating and stave off diseases like Alzheimer’s, The Telegraph reported.
The study found that old mice given transfusions of younger blood performed better in a memory task than those left to age naturally. They also began to re-grow connections in their brains which had previously begun to disappear as part of the aging process and which affect memory.
A previous study had already established the opposite – that young mice given a transfusion of blood from older mice began to show signs of premature aging in their brains.
Dr Saul Villeda, who led the research, said he now plans to test the therapy on a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease, in which brain connections break down and cause loss of memory and learning ability.”I think any sort of disease that has that component, there is a chance this might help,” he said.
“What I am thinking is if we can address it earlier, when our body still has the control to prevent this from happening, then we might not have to cure Alzheimer’s, we might just be able to stop it,” he said.
Villeda said older people’s blood may damage the brain, and other parts of the body such as the muscles and vital organs, because it contains a greater number of inflammatory proteins in its plasma. He gave a group of 18-month old mice, which were nearing the end of their life spans, eight transfusions of younger mice’s plasma over the course of a month, adding up to five per cent of their total blood supply.
They were then put in a water maze where they had to learn the route to a hidden platform on which they could stand. Untreated mice usually made two or three wrong turns but the treated group were able to find the right path most of the time.
“They were 18 months old but they were acting much younger, like a four to six-month-old,” Villeda said.
He also found that mice given a younger blood supply began to sprout new synapses in their brains, which carry messages between nerve cells, giving them 20 per cent more than the untreated mice on average.
The study was presented at the Society for Neuroscience conference in New Orleans.
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