• Alzheimer's as autoimmune disease

    From JAB@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 2 05:37:51 2024
    Alzheimer's as autoimmune disease

    We believe that beta-amyloid is not an abnormally produced protein,
    but rather is a normally occurring molecule that is part of the
    brain's immune system. It is supposed to be there.

    When brain trauma occurs or when bacteria are present in the brain, beta-amyloid is a key contributor to the brain's comprehensive immune
    response. And this is where the problem begins.

    Because of striking similarities between the fat molecules that make
    up both the membranes of bacteria and the membranes of brain cells, beta-amyloid cannot tell the difference between invading bacteria and
    host brain cells, and mistakenly attacks the very brain cells it is
    supposed to be protecting.

    This leads to a chronic, progressive loss of brain cell function,
    which ultimately culminates in dementia - all because our body's
    immune system cannot differentiate between bacteria and brain cells.

    https://www.sciencealert.com/alzheimers-might-not-actually-be-a-brain-disease-expert-reveals

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  • From Julieta Shem@21:1/5 to JAB on Sat Mar 2 21:56:16 2024
    JAB <[email protected]d> writes:

    Alzheimer's as autoimmune disease

    We believe that beta-amyloid is not an abnormally produced protein,
    but rather is a normally occurring molecule that is part of the
    brain's immune system. It is supposed to be there.

    When brain trauma occurs or when bacteria are present in the brain, beta-amyloid is a key contributor to the brain's comprehensive immune response. And this is where the problem begins.

    Because of striking similarities between the fat molecules that make
    up both the membranes of bacteria and the membranes of brain cells, beta-amyloid cannot tell the difference between invading bacteria and
    host brain cells, and mistakenly attacks the very brain cells it is
    supposed to be protecting.

    This leads to a chronic, progressive loss of brain cell function,
    which ultimately culminates in dementia - all because our body's
    immune system cannot differentiate between bacteria and brain cells.

    Very interesting, right? That's the current understanding. For now,
    the message seems clear---we need to keep the bacteria out. How did
    they get in there in the first place (in the out-of-balance numbers)?
    Why is the immune system having to handle so much bacteria in the brain?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From JAB@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 8 12:35:34 2024
    On Sat, 02 Mar 2024 21:56:16 -0300, Julieta Shem <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    we need to keep the bacteria out.


    New Evidence Suggests Long COVID Could Be a Brain Injury

    Brain fog is one of the most common, persistent complaints in patients
    with long COVID. It affects as many as 46% of patients who also deal
    with other cognitive concerns like memory loss and difficulty
    concentrating.

    Now, researchers believe they know why. A new study has found that
    these symptoms may be the result of a viral-borne brain injury that
    may cause cognitive and mental health issues that persist for years.

    Researchers found that 351 patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19
    had evidence of a long-term brain injury a year after contracting the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The findings were based on a series of cognitive
    tests, self-reported symptoms, brain scans, and biomarkers.

    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-evidence-suggests-long-covid-could-be-brain-injury-2024a10002v0?form=fpf

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  • From Julieta Shem@21:1/5 to JAB on Fri Mar 8 16:22:27 2024
    JAB <[email protected]d> writes:

    On Sat, 02 Mar 2024 21:56:16 -0300, Julieta Shem <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    we need to keep the bacteria out.


    New Evidence Suggests Long COVID Could Be a Brain Injury

    Brain fog is one of the most common, persistent complaints in patients
    with long COVID. It affects as many as 46% of patients who also deal
    with other cognitive concerns like memory loss and difficulty
    concentrating.

    Now, researchers believe they know why. A new study has found that
    these symptoms may be the result of a viral-borne brain injury that
    may cause cognitive and mental health issues that persist for years.

    Researchers found that 351 patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19
    had evidence of a long-term brain injury a year after contracting the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The findings were based on a series of cognitive
    tests, self-reported symptoms, brain scans, and biomarkers.

    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-evidence-suggests-long-covid-could-be-brain-injury-2024a10002v0?form=fpf

    The website sucks. Full article below. Thanks for posting.

    Interesting passages:

    Brain scans have previously shown atrophy to the brain's gray matter
    in COVID-19 patients, likely caused by inflammation from a heightened
    immune response rather than the virus itself.

    One study, from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
    Stroke (NINDS), found that in those infected with COVID-19 who already
    had dementia, the virus "rapidly accelerated structural and functional
    brain deterioration."

    [...] researchers don't know about the impact on those who had less
    serious cases of the virus.

    Perhaps nothing happens to those who had less serious cases of the virus because so many people contracted the virus and didn't experience any
    symptom at all. In other words, it is not quite the virus that's the
    heart of the problem. It's might be people's health that need some
    love.

    (*) Full article

    New Evidence Suggests Long COVID Could Be a Brain Injury Sara Novak

    February 08, 2024

    Brain fog is one of the most common, persistent complaints in patients
    with long COVID. It affects as many as 46% of patients who also deal
    with other cognitive concerns like memory loss and difficulty
    concentrating.

    Now, researchers believe they know why. A new study has found that these symptoms may be the result of a viral-borne brain injury that may cause cognitive and mental health issues that persist for years.

    Researchers found that 351 patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19
    had evidence of a long-term brain injury a year after contracting the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The findings were based on a series of cognitive
    tests, self-reported symptoms, brain scans, and biomarkers.

    Brain Deficits Equal to 20 Years of Brain Aging As part of the preprint
    study, participants took a cognition test with their scores age-matched
    to those who had not suffered a serious bout of COVID-19. Then a blood
    sample was taken to look for specific biomarkers, showing that elevated
    levels of certain biomarkers were consistent with a brain injury. Using
    brain scans, researchers also found that certain regions of the brain associated with attention were reduced in volume.

    Patients who participated in the study were "less accurate and slower"
    in their cognition, and suffered from at least one mental health
    condition, such as depression, anxiety, or posttraumatic stress
    disorder, according to researchers.

    The brain deficits found in COVID-19 patients were equivalent to 20
    years of brain aging and provided proof of what doctors have feared:
    that this virus can damage the brain and result in ongoing mental health issues.

    "We found global deficits across cognition," said lead study author
    Benedict Michael, PhD, director of the Infection Neuroscience Lab at the University of Liverpool in Liverpool, England. "The cognitive and memory problems that patients complained of were associated with
    neuroanatomical changes to the brain."

    Proof That Symptoms Aren't 'Figment' of Patients' Imaginations Cognitive deficits were common among all patients, but the researchers said they
    don't yet know whether the brain damage causes permanent cognitive
    decline. But the research provides patients who have been overlooked by
    some clinicians with proof that their conditions aren't a figment of
    their imaginations, said Karla L. Thompson, PhD, lead neuropsychologist
    at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine's COVID Recovery
    Clinic.

    "Even though we're several years into this pandemic, there are still a
    lot of providers who don't believe that their patients are experiencing
    these residual symptoms," said Thompson, "That's why the use of
    biomarkers is important, because it provides an objective indication
    that the brain has been compromised in some way."

    Some patients with long COVID have said that getting their doctors to
    believe they have a physical ailment has been a persistent problem
    throughout the pandemic and especially as it relates to the
    sometimes-vague collection of symptoms associated with brain fog. One
    study found that as many as 79% of study respondents reported negative interactions with their healthcare providers when they sought treatment
    for their long-COVID symptoms.

    How Do COVID-Related Brain Injuries Happen? Researchers are unsure
    what's causing these brain injuries, though they have identified some
    clues. Previous research has suggested that such injuries might be the
    result of a lack of oxygen to the brain, especially in patients who were hospitalized, like those in this study, and were put on ventilators.

    Brain scans have previously shown atrophy to the brain's gray matter in COVID-19 patients, likely caused by inflammation from a heightened
    immune response rather than the virus itself. This inflammatory response
    seems to affect the central nervous system. As part of the new study, researchers found some neuroprotective effects of using steroids during hospitalization to reduce brain inflammation.

    The results suggest that clinicians should overcome their skepticism and consider the possibility that their patients have suffered a brain
    injury and should be treated appropriately, said James C. Jackson, PsyD,
    a neuropsychiatrist at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. "The
    old saying is that if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, it's a
    duck," said Jackson.

    He contends that treatments used for patients who have brain injuries
    have also been shown to be effective in treating long COVID–related
    brain fog symptoms. These may include speech, cognitive, and
    occupational therapy as well as meeting with a neuropsychiatrist for the treatment of related mental health concerns.

    A New Path Forward Treating long-COVID brain fog like a brain injury can
    help patients get back to some semblance of normalcy, researchers
    said. "What we're seeing in terms of brain injury biomarkers and
    differences in brain scans correlates to real-life problems that these
    patients are dealing with on a daily basis," said Jackson. These include problems at work and in life with multitasking, remembering details,
    meeting deadlines, synthesizing large amounts of information, and
    maintaining focus on the task at hand, he said.

    There's also a fear that even with treatment, the aging of the brain
    caused by the virus might have long-term repercussions and that this
    enduring injury may cause the early onset of dementia and Alzheimer's
    disease in those who were already vulnerable to it. One study, from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), found
    that in those infected with COVID-19 who already had dementia, the virus "rapidly accelerated structural and functional brain deterioration."

    "We already know the role that neuroinflammation plays in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease," said Thompson. "If long COVID is
    involved in prolonged inflammation of the brain, it goes a long way in explaining the mechanism underlying [the study's reported] brain aging."

    Still More to Learn In some ways, this study raises nearly as many
    questions as it does answers. While it provides concrete evidence around
    the damage the virus is doing to the brains of patients who contracted
    severe COVID-19, researchers don't know about the impact on those who
    had less serious cases of the virus.

    For Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, chief of research and development at the Veterans
    Affairs St. Louis Health Care System, the concern is that some
    long-COVID patients may be suffering from cognitive deficits that are
    more subtle but still impacting their daily lives, and that they're not
    getting the help they need.

    What's more, said Al-Aly, it's unclear whether the impacts of the brain
    damage are permanent or how to stop them from worsening. Researchers and clinicians need a better understanding of the mechanism that allows this
    virus to enter the brain and do structural damage. If it's inflammation,
    will anti-inflammatory or antiviral medications work at preventing it?
    Will steroids help to offset the damage? "It's critical we find some
    answers," he said.

    "SARS-CoV-2 isn't going anywhere. It will continue to infect the
    population, so if this is indeed a virus that damages the brain in the
    long term or permanently, we need to figure out what can be done to stop
    it," said Al-Aly.

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