Brain Breakthrough!

Alzheimer’s and cognitive decline
are reversed using this revolutionary natural program

DietExerciseSenior.jpg

Collage by FAIM: Man by Kurhan, ©2016 / 123rf.com license; Bicyclers by Antranias / Pixabay License

Diet and exercise are two components of the program recommended by Dr. Bredesen to improve brain health.

Are you starting to have trouble recalling names, dates or words you’ve had no problem remembering in the past? Can’t find your keys or remember where you parked your car? There’s no need to worry. Occasional lapses like forgetting a name or misplacing your keys are a normal part of life. But when things progress to the point where you can’t remember the names of family members or you start to put things away in odd places, like stashing your keys in the freezer, then that may be a sign of a more serious memory issue.

One of the biggest fears we all share is that declining memory means we’re on our way to developing cognitive decline, dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. And there are reasons to be concerned. Estimates are that by 2050 these problems could affect 51% of those over the age of 65. It’s a disease that’s eclipsed only by cancer and cardiovascular disease in the number of deaths it causes, with women being affected more than men.1

But no matter what you’ve been led to believe Alzheimer’s disease, dementia and cognitive decline are not a normal part of aging, and they are preventable. For example, strong evidence suggests that estrogen for women, testosterone for men, the mineral lithium and turmeric could all help prevent Alzheimer’s (see Nutrition & Healing, October 2008). In addition, animal experiments have demonstrated that niacinamide may be able to partially reverse some of the brain cell pathology seen in Alzheimer’s disease (see Nutrition & Healing, March 2009).

Plan to reverse Alzheimer’s naturally is revealed!

While prevention is always best of course, effective treatment for those who are already suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline is desperately needed as well. Despite los federales “approval” of various patent medicines to treat Alzheimer’s disease, none are very effective. But just last year, Dale Bredesen, M.D., a Professor of Neurology and Director of the Easton Center for Alzheimer’s Disease Research at the University of California, Los Angeles, and founding President and CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging reported an enormous breakthrough, an effective therapy for reversing cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease with an entirely natural approach! The program combines a number of techniques that natural medicine practitioners have been recommending for years – and in some cases even decades!

However, Dr. Bredesen is the first to put them all together into the comprehensive program that is summarized later in this article. He wrote at the conclusion of his report:

“Of the first ten patients who used this program, including patients with memory loss associated with Alzheimer’s disease, amnesic mild cognitive impairment, or subjective cognitive impairment, nine showed subjective or objective improvements. One potentially important outcome is that all six of the patients whose cognitive decline had a major impact on job performance were able to return to work or continue working without difficulty.”2

Spotting the phases of cognitive decline

Cognitive decline is a progressive disorder, sometimes beginning as early as 20 years before a patient finally gets a formal diagnosis. There are a number of recognizable phases. Although interpretations differ, there are generally seven phases in what is called the Global Deterioration Scale.3

The early stage of cognitive decline may simply involve your own interpretation of how well your memory is working, or what would be formally called subjective cognitive impairment. There’s usually minimal disruption to the activities of daily living at this stage, but you may sense that your mind is not as sharp as it once was.

Those studying memory disorders are focusing attention on this stage, as it may actually be the earliest we can spot a problem and a good predictor of things getting worse. When 531 participants enrolled in the Biologically Resilient Adults in Neurological Studies (BRAiNS) program were assessed for subjective memory complaints (SMC), those who reported changes in memory were more likely to develop impairment than those who didn’t report changes. The average length of time of progression to more serious cognitive impairment was 12.1 years. Autopsies of the brains of those who had subjective memory complaints were more likely to show evidence of changes in brain pathology even if the person didn’t have impairment while living.4

When dementia is the wrong diagnosis

It’s important to remember that not everything that appears to be dementia or cognitive decline actually is. Hypothyroidism, head trauma, brain tumors, drug interactions, infectious diseases and even (in rare cases) chronic urinary tract infections can be associated with similar symptoms. If you believe that you or a family member may be experiencing memory loss, it’s important to rule out these and other serious causes of decline in health that may be contributing to symptoms.

Catching it early could be key

As the disorder progresses, there are more frequent episodes of forgetfulness and confusion during what is described as mild cognitive impairment.5 While this stage is believed to be a precursor to Alzheimer’s disease, it’s not always progressive and a person can remain in this stage for a long time. Additional symptoms of memory loss occur over time, resulting in the diagnosis of mild, moderate or late stage/severe Alzheimer’s disease.6

It’s the window of time between subjective cognitive impairment and the more progressive forms of the disease that provide the best opportunity for slowing or reversing cognitive decline. So this, naturally, is where many researchers are focusing their attention.

While we still don’t understand exactly how and why Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia develop, there are several theories.

Focusing on plaques and tangles

The most popular working theory is that symptoms related to memory loss are a result of nerve damage from specific proteins that accumulate in abnormal ways in the brain. These markers, known as beta-amyloid (what we think of as plaque) and tau protein (what we think of as neurofibrillary tangles), are seen in higher amounts in those with cognitive decline.7 How these normal proteins develop into abnormal deposits is not known.

Up until now, most research has focused on the neurotoxic effects of beta amyloid in the development of cognitive decline. One recent animal study has asserted, however, that it’s actually the tau protein that’s the primary offender. (In fact, it was the tau protein that was significantly reduced by niacinamide in the Alzheimer’s study mentioned earlier.) The research suggests that the tau protein stimulates beta amyloid to develop into abnormal plaque when tau is not functioning properly.8 When tau protein is doing what it should in the brain, the study asserts that beta amyloid doesn’t accumulate and is instead eliminated from the cell.

These markers develop in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex areas of the brain where new memories are formed.9 As they accumulate they have a toxic effect on the neurons impairing their ability to communicate with each other. Eventually, neurons die and the brain shrinks in size, resulting in the type of memory loss we associate with Alzheimer’s disease.

The drive behind drugs

For years, conventional researchers (usually those favoring the use of patent medicines) have tried to find a patent medicine that can put the brakes on cognitive decline.10 But the truth is the patent medicines currently being used to treat Alzheimer’s disease simply aren’t working. At best, the “approved” drugs for the treatment of the disease are useful for less than 12 months in about half of those who take them, and less effective – or not at all effective – for the rest.11

This really isn’t surprising since, as explained before, it’s very unlikely that cognitive decline, dementia and Alzheimer’s are caused by a deficiency of molecules never before found in human bodies or even on planet Earth. However, as long as money remains the #1 goal of much of our “health care” system, this situation is unlikely to change.

At the same time, there’s another group of researchers who have been advocating a multi-factorial (and more natural) approach to the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline. They argue that these diseases aren’t caused by just one thing, but rather multiple causes lead to memory loss. Among the causes mentioned are oxidative stress, inflammatory processes such as those that occur in type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance, hypertension, chemical and environmental toxins and vitamin and mineral deficiencies.

Neurologist and author David Perlmutter discussed many of these toxic insults in his book, Grain Brain, and in particular points out the neurotoxic effects of grains on neurons and brain health.12

Study: Lifestyle changes lead to significant improvements

One large-scale study conducted over a two-year period and ending in 2014 reported positive results using lifestyle modification. The Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability evaluated 1260 participants who were at risk for cognitive decline. The participants were divided into two groups, with one group focusing on a program that included nutritional counseling, exercise, reduction of cardiovascular health risks and cognitive enhancement. The other group received health advice, but wasn’t put on any particular program.

The group that followed the multifaceted approach to lifestyle saw significant improvements in memory, reaction time and processing, while the group that received just health advice didn’t. It was the first study to demonstrate that a multi-factorial approach would work in the treatment of cognitive decline and a longer, 7-year study is planned.13

In a 2013 report, Drs. Bredesen and John wrote: “To date, no truly effective therapy has been developed for Alzheimer’s disease or mild cognitive impairment. In searching for new approaches that may succeed where previous ones have failed, it may be instructive to consider the successful therapeutic developments for other chronic illnesses such as cancer and human immunodeficiency virus.”14

Program REVERSED cognitive decline in 3 to 6 months!

Now let’s take a look at Dr. Bredesen’s 2014 research report. The hypothesis underlying his study is that the development of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia are part of deteriorating metabolic processes that left unchecked, can progress to the disabling symptoms we identify as cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease. His study focused on an astonishing thirty-six different areas that can go wrong on the way to memory loss. His therapeutic approach is described as the use of “multiple modalities to achieve metabolic enhancement for neurodegeneration (MEND).”15

Five men and five women between the ages of 55 and 75 all with varying degrees of cognitive impairment were enrolled in the study. At its onset, participants were having difficulty managing their activities of daily living, including maintaining a job and managing their personal lives.

Dr. Bredesen’s approaches included dietary changes, stress reduction, exercise, cognitive stimulation and sleep improvement, to name just a few components of the therapeutic program. At the conclusion of the study the symptoms of cognitive decline had been reversed in an incredible 9 out of 10 participants within 3-6 months of beginning the program.

Follow Dr. Bredesen’s path to an Alzheimer’s-free life!

The components of the program that participants undertook were designed to target many different ways in which the brain may be affected by neurotoxic insults.

  1. Improve diet to reduce insulin resistance, improve type 2 diabetes and decrease inflammation. In the Bredesen study participants had an option to try one of several different diets including low grain, low glycemic and anti-inflammatory diets. Volunteers were encouraged to reduce simple carbohydrates, to maintain a 12-hour overnight fast and to eat their last meal of the day no later than three hours before bedtime. As part of the program, participants were advised to keep their fasting insulin levels below 7 and their HgA1C levels under 5.5. Participants were also encouraged to take pre- and probiotics to improve gastrointestinal health.
  2. Improve mitochondrial function by reducing oxidative stress. Participants in the program were encouraged to take supplements to raise and maintain antioxidant levels and optimize mitochondrial function. These supplements included CoQ10, alpha-lipoic acid, polyquinolone quinone (PQQ), n-acetyl-cysteine (NAC), acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR), selenium, zinc, resveratrol, ascorbate and thiamine. Other antioxidants that were recommended to improve oxidative stress were vitamin E, selenium, blueberries and vitamin C.
  3. Reduce stress and the resulting inflammation by practicing yoga and meditation daily.16,17
  4. Improve sleep to increase oxygenation and reduce stress, by getting eight hours of sleep a night. Participants were given .5 mg of tryptophan and melatonin each night. And, if needed, participants were also treated for sleep apnea.18
  5. Balance hormone levels. Participant’s estrogen, progesterone, pregnenolone, testosterone and thyroid hormones were monitored and kept properly balanced. When combined with #9 (improving acetylcholine synthesis) estrogen can have a beneficial effect on brain function—as shown in animal studies19,20 – even in older women who’ve been deprived of adequate estrogen for a relatively long time.
  6. Exercise was encouraged with participants being asked to do 30-60 minutes per day, 4-6 days per week.21
  7. Stimulate the mind using brain exercises, such as those developed by Posit Science.
  8. Enhance cognition with supplements including the herb Bacopa monnieri and the mineral magnesium-L-threonate.22
  9. Improve focus using pantothenic acid, a precursor to acetylcholine synthesis. (Most current patent medicine therapies for Alzheimer’s focus on increasing the levels of acetylcholine in the brain; they work—although with relatively poor results – by slowing the breakdown of acetylcholine.) It makes more natural sense to increase acetylcholine as Nature does, with supplementation of choline, a major actetylchloline precursor and other cofactors. Pantothenic acid is a major cofactor. The process is also dependent on zinc, B vitamins and magnesium.23
  10. Reduce the inflammatory markers homocysteine and C-reactive protein (CRP) using supplements. Recommended supplements to reduce homocysteine included methylcobalamin (vitamin B12), methylfolate (or folinic acid), pyridoxyl 5 phosphate (P5P, a form of vitamin B6) and trimethylglycine (TMG). Participants aimed for a serum B12 level of above 500 and a homocysteine level below 7. To reduce CRP, participants in the study were encouraged to keep their CRP level under 1.0 by adjusting diet, and using supplemental curcumin and EPA/DHA.
  11. Focus on other beneficial supplementation.
    • Medium chain triglycerides (MCT) such as coconut oil which has many proponents in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. Coconut oil may work by reducing inflammation and the production of beta amyloid.24
    • Zinc and copper balanced with monitored supplementation.
    • Curcumin and Ashwagandha which other research has found to reduce beta amyloid
    • Vitamin D3 and K2. Participants were encouraged to keep their vitamin D3 levels at 50 to 100 ng/ml (the “tropical optimal” level) and to take vitamin K2.
  12. Promote new nerve connections (synapses). Supplemental citicoline and DHA were recommended for this purpose.
  13. Increase Sirtuin 1. For this, participants were advised to take resveratrol, which is also well-known as a longevity-promoting supplement.
  14. Reduce heavy metal toxicity. Measurement and chelation therapy of heavy metals, such as mercury, lead, and cadmium, was encouraged for all study participants
  15. Increase nerve growth factor using supplemental acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) and Lion’s Mane mushrooms (Hericium erinaceus).
  16. Maintain good dental care. Participants were encouraged to maintain good oral hygiene throughout the program including using an electric toothbrush and electric dental flosser.

A brief summary of Dr. Bredesen's research, Table 2 25

Female Study Participants
Age and Gender Stage of Cognitive Impairment Result Reported in Study
55 year old female Mild cognitive decline to early Alzheimer's disease Improved to normal. Continues to work.
60 year old female Late Alzheimer's disease Declined, no improvement.
63 year old female SCI – subjective cognitive impairment Improved to normal. Continues to work.
67 year old female Mild cognitive impairment Has improved to normal and remained stable for 2.5 years. Continues to work.
75 year old female Mild cognitive impairment to early Alzheimer's disease Has improved. Continues to work.
Male Study Participants
Age and Gender Stage of Cognitive Impairment Result Reported in Study
55 year old male Mild cognitive impairment to early Alzheimer's disease Has improved. Continues to work.
69 year old male Early Alzheimer's disease Improved. Continues to work.
70 year old male Alzheimer's disease Has improved and passed previously failed memory test.
72 year old male Mild cognitive impairment Has improved. Continues to work.
75 year old male SCI – subjective cognitive impairment Has improved. Continues to work.

STILL symptom free two and a half years AFTER the study!

Dr. Bredesen shared three participant profiles in his study and we’re going to take a closer look at two of them here.

Case study number one is that of a 67-year old woman who had been experiencing progressive cognitive decline. She had been having trouble at work especially when she had to deal with numbers. This kind of complaint is often an early sign of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. She had begun to have difficulty driving, remembering pet names and finding light switches at home, problems she hadn’t previously had. Her doctor diagnosed her with mild cognitive impairment.

She began some, but not all, of the steps in the therapeutic program outlined by Dr. Bredesen and detailed above. The program is personalized for each individual and she implemented the following six approaches:

  1. She changed her diet avoiding gluten, processed foods and simple carbohydrates. She ate more vegetables, fruit and fish (wild, not farmed); maintained a 12-hour fast overnight; and stopped eating 3 hours before going to bed.
  2. She started doing yoga (eventually becoming a yoga instructor herself), meditating 20 minutes twice a day, and exercising at least 30 minutes a day for 4-6 days a week.
  3. She increased her sleep from 4-5 hours a night to 7-8 hours, aided by taking .5 mg of melatonin before bed.
  4. She started taking 1 mg of vitamin B12, 2000 mg of fish oil, 2000IU of vitamin D3 and 200 mg of CoQ10 daily.
  5. She improved her dental care by using an electric toothbrush and flosser.
  6. She went back on a bio-identical hormone replacement program.

She showed improvement within 3-6 months of initiating the program, as did 9 of the 10 participants in the study. She lost 20 pounds and was able to drive, remember important numbers and work in her demanding job without any problem. The progressive cognitive decline she had been experiencing was stopped and she remained symptom free for two-and a half years after the study.

His decline in memory was stopped in its tracks!

Dr. Bredesen also profiled the case of a 69-year old man who had been experiencing cognitive decline over an 11-year period. He had trouble recalling the combination on his gym locker, which he felt was not normal for him. He was experiencing an increasing inability to recognize the faces of people he was working with, and needed help in managing his daily schedule. He could no longer add up columns of numbers in his head, a skill he had had for many years. After PET scanning, he was diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s disease.

He began the therapeutic program advocated by Dr. Bredesen. Using the following components of the program (remember each program is individualized):

  1. He changed his diet eliminating simple carbohydrates and eating more fruits, vegetables, non-farmed, organic chicken and grass-fed beef. He fasted 12 hours overnight and avoided eating 3 hours before bed.
  2. He began a daily supplement program that included taking one teaspoon of coconut oil twice a day as well as a taking a probiotic, 250 milligrams of Bacopa monniera, 500 milligrams of Ashwagandha, 400 milligrams of turmeric, 1000 micrgrams of vitamin B12, 800 micrograms of methylfolate, 50 milligrams of pyridoxine-5-phosphate, 500 milligrams of citicoline, one gram of vitamin C, 5000 IU of vitamin D3, 200 milligrams of CoQ10, 50 milligrams of zinc picolinate, 100 milligrams of alpha lipoic acid, 320 milligrams of DHEA, 180 milligrams of EPA and 400 IU if vitamin E daily.
  3. He optimizing his sleep schedule by taking 0.5 mg of melatonin before bed, and sleeping 8 hours most nights
  4. He maintained a strenuous exercise program of swimming, bicycling, and running.

After being on the program 6 months, he not only lost 10 pounds but was able to recognize co-workers, remember his work schedule, and function as well as, if not better, than previously in some key areas, such as calculating columns of numbers quickly in his head. After years of rapidly progressive symptoms, the decline in memory was halted.

Nine out of ten improved – no drugs needed!

This exciting research supports an individualized approach to the treatment of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, using diet, exercise, and natural supplements which target progressive body deterioration. But as is the custom among researchers reporting breakthrough therapies, Dr. Bredesen cautiously writes that more study is needed, and that so far the results are “anecdotal.”

But since I’m not the researcher, I can be straightforward with you about these results (nine of ten significantly improved with entirely natural means and no patent medicines!) supporting everything that clinicians and other health professionals in the holistic world have been saying for a hundred years or more: human disease is best treated with substances and energies actually found on planet Earth, and not with substances or energies never (before patenting) found here!

This research also shows us that disorders affecting memory and cognitive function are a product of our modern life with many things in our environment affecting us. The best approach is to prevent them completely by living a lifestyle that promotes rather than degrades brain health. If that’s not been done and treatment is needed, it should be an entirely natural program to address multiple aspects of deteriorating body function. And before I forget: Thank you so much to Dr. Dale E. Bredesen!

Thank you to Dr. Lauren Russel for organizing the data used in this article.

Article Citations

  1. Alzheimer’s Association. 2014 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures. Alzheimer’s & Dementia. 2014. 10(2): 5-23
  2. Bredesen DE. Reversal of cognitive decline: a novel therapeutic program. Aging (Albany NY). 2014. 6(9): 707-17.
  3. Reisberg B, Ferris SH, de Leon MJ, Crook T. The Global Deterioration scale for assessment of primary degenerative dementia. Am J Psychiatry. 1982. 139(9): 1136-9.
  4. Kryscio R, Abner E, Cooper GE et al. Self-reported memory complaints. Implications from a longitudinal cohort with autopsies. Neurology. 2014. 10:1212.
  5. Petersen RC, Roberts RO, Knopman DS, et al. Prevalence of mild cognitive impairment is higher in men. The Mayo Clinic Study of Aging. Neurology. 2010;75(10):889–897
  6. Robinson L, Saisan J, Segal J. Symptoms, Stages, Diagnosis, and Coping Tips. Helpguide.org. December 2014.
  7. Selkoe DJ. Alzheimer’s disease: genes, proteins, and therapy. Physiol Rev. 2001. 81: 741-766.
  8. Lonskaya I, Hebron M, Chen W, Schachtr J, Moussa C. Tau deletion impairs intracellular B-amyloid-42 clearance and leads to more extracellular plaque deposition in gene transfer models. Molecular Neurodegeneration. 2014. 9:46.
  9. Canto CB, Wouterlood FG, Witter MP. What does the anatomical organization of the entorhinal cortex tell us? Neural Plasticity. 2008. 2008: Article ID 38123. 18 pages.
  10. Francis PT, Palmer AM, Snape M, Wilcock GK. The Cholinergic Hypothesis of Alzheimer’s Disease: a Review of Progress. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. 1999. 66(2): 137-47.
  11. Website of the Alzheimer’s Association. Alzheimer’s Myths.
  12. Perlmutter D. Grain Brain. Little, Brown and Company, New York, pp 4-5, 63-64.
  13. Kivipelto M, Solomon A, Ahtiluoto S, Nqandu T, Lehtisalo J et al. The Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability (FINGER): study design and progress. Alzheimers Dement. 2013. 9(6): 657-65.
  14. Bredesen DE, John, V. Next generation therapeutics for Alzheimer’s disease. EMBO Mol Med. 2013; 5:795-798.
  15. Bredesen DE. Reversal of cognitive decline: a novel therapeutic program. Aging (Albany, NY). 2014. 6(9): 707-17.
  16. Curtis K, Osadchuk A, Katz J. An eight-week yoga intervention is associated with improvements in pain, psychological functioning and mindfulness, and changes in cortisol levels in women with fibromyalgia. Journal of Pain Research. 2011; 189
  17. Black DS, Cole, SW, Irwin MR, Breen E et al. Yogic meditation reverses NF-KB and IRF-related transcriptome dynamics in leukocytes of family dementia caregivers in a randomized controlled trial. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 38(3): 348-355.
  18. Polimeni G, Esposito E, Bevelacqua V, Guarneri C and Cuzzocrea S. Role of melatonin supplementation in neurodegenerative disorders. Front Biosci (Landmark Ed). 2014; 19:429-446.
  19. Gibbs RB, Mauk R, Nelson D, Johnson DA. Donepezil treatment restores the ability of estradiol to enhance cognitive performance in aged rats: evidence for the cholinergic basis of the critical period hypothesis. Horm Behav. 2009. 56(1): 73-83.
  20. Gibbs RB, Chipman AM, Hammond R, Nelson D. Galanthamine plus estradiol treatment enhances cognitive performance in aged ovariectomized rats. Horm Behav. 2011. 60(5): 607-16.
  21. Smith JC, Nielson KA, Woodard JL, Seidenberg M, Durgerian S, Hazlett KE, Figueroa CM, Kandah CC, Kay CD, Matthews MA and Rao SM. Physical activity reduces hippocampal atrophy in elders at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Frontiers in aging neuroscience. 2014; 6:61.
  22. Zanotta D, Puricelli S and Bonoldi G. Cognitive effects of a dietary supplement made from extract of Bacopa monnieri, astaxanthin, phosphatidylserine, and vitamin E in subjects with mild cognitive impairment: a noncomparative, exploratory clinical study. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2014; 10:225-230.
  23. McDaniel MA et al. “Brain-specific” nutrients: a memory cure? Nutrition. 2003.19 (11=12): 957-75.
  24. Krikorian R, Shidler MD, Dangelo K, Couch SC, Benoit SC, Clegg DJ. Dietary ketosis enhances memory in mild cognitive impairment. Neurobiol Aging. 2012. 33:425.e19-27.
  25. Bredesen DE. Reversal of cognitive decline: a novel therapeutic program. Aging (Albany, NY). 2014. 6(9): 707-17.

See more at the Nutrition and Healing, May 2015 Newsletter (subscription required).

Excerpted from Nutrition and Healing, May 2015 issue. Used with permission.

About the Author

Jonathan Wright

Since 1976, Jonathan Wright, M.D., has written about the latest natural healing discoveries in his books, newsletter and magazine articles as well as teaching his techniques at yearly medical conferences. The medical director of Tahoma Clinic in the Puget Sound area of Washington State, he is a well-known researcher, author, and