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Sekerob
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Re: Interesting Medical News (Non-WCG Related Projects)

Interesting how the nanotech application to time-release of insulin has taken a second form from normal ingestion development of same rather than inhaling.... on the diabetes front last year at a Spanish Meet a paper was presented where it was found that Diabetes was a precursor to Alzheimer i.e. a high chance of getting it if being of type II. The linked article below takes a different view and is headed: "Alzheimer's Disease Could Be A Third Form Of Diabetes"


Science Daily — Insulin, it turns out, may be as important for the mind as it is for the body. Research in the last few years has raised the possibility that Alzheimer's memory loss could be due to a novel third form of diabetes.

Now scientists at Northwestern University have discovered why brain insulin signalling -- crucial for memory formation -- would stop working in Alzheimer's disease. They have shown that a toxic protein found in the brains of individuals with Alzheimer's removes insulin receptors from nerve cells, rendering those neurons insulin resistant. (The protein, known to attack memory-forming synapses, is called an ADDL for "amyloid ß-derived diffusible ligand.")

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Re: Interesting Medical News (Non-WCG Related Projects)

Cell-size nanothreads spun from the tip of a needle that uses pressure rather than an electric charge promise novel regeneration treatments:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleid=62833D27-E7F2-99DF-36DEFE9A23005C7F
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Studies: Stored blood lacks nitric oxide

Much of the stored blood given to millions of people every year may lack a component vital for it to deliver oxygen to the tissues. Nitric oxide, which helps keep blood vessels open, begins breaking down as soon as blood goes into storage, two research teams report in separate studies in this week's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences........
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Sekerob
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Sekerob
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Re: Interesting Medical News (Non-WCG Related Projects)

Blood test shows promise in diagnosing Alzheimer's

Article Launched: 10/14/2007 10:13:15 AM PDT
A team of researchers at Stanford University and several other institutions believe they've discovered a simple blood test for detecting the onset of Alzheimer's disease, long before its victims are robbed of their memory and personality.

The test - which spots Alzheimer's by detecting unusual activity in proteins associated with the disease - was determined to be 90 percent correct in diagnosing the malady and 91 percent accurate in predicting who will be afflicted by it, according to a study published Sunday in the journal Nature Medicine.

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