New Evidence Exercise Can Slow Onset of Alzheimer's Memory Loss
by Science Daily:Keeping active can slow down the progression of memory loss in people with Alzheimer's disease, a study has shown.A team of researchers from The University of Nottingham has identified a stress hormone produced during moderate exercise that may protect the brain from memory changes related to the disease. The work, funded by Research into Ageing (Age UK) and the University and published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, may also explain why people who are susceptible to stress are at more risk of developing the disease.Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia affecting almost 500,000 people in the UK, the majority of who are over the age of 65. Symptoms can include memory loss, mood changes and problems with communicating and reasoning. There is no cure for Alzheimer's and, although there are a few treatments available that can reduce the symptoms in some people, they cannot halt the progression of the disease.Increasingly, there is evidence that physical and mental activity can reduce people's chances of developing the disease or can slow down it's progression but up until now it has been unclear how this happens.Protective effectThe Nottingham team, led by Dr Marie-Christine Pardon in the School of Biomedical Sciences, has discovered that the stress hormone CRF -- or corticotrophin-releasing factor -- may have a protective effect on the brain from the memory changes brought on by Alzheimer's disease.CRF is most associated with producing stress and is found in high levels in people experiencing some forms of anxiety and depressive diseases. Normal levels of CRF, however, are beneficial to the brain, keeping the mental faculties sharp and aiding the survival of nerve cells. Unsurprisingly then, studies have shown that people with Alzheimer's disease have a reduced level of CRF.The researchers used an experimental drug to prevent the hormone from binding to a brain receptor called CRFR1 in mice with Alzheimer's disease that were free from memory impairments, therefore blocking the effects of the hormone. They discovered that the mice had an abnormal stress response with reduced anxiety but increased behavioural inhibition when confronted by a stressful situation -- in this case being placed in a new environment -- and this is was due to the abnormal functioning of the CRFR1. This abnormal stress response before the onset of symptoms may explain why people susceptible to stress are more at risk of developing Alzheimer's.