Posted on 07/09/2009 8:02:25 AM PDT by MetaThought
ScienceDaily (Aug. 18, 2008) A new study conducted by researchers at Children's Hospital & Research Center Oakland shows that a century-old drug, methylene blue, may be able to slow or even cure Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. Used at a very low concentration about the equivalent of a few raindrops in four Olympic-sized swimming pools of water the drug slows cellular aging and enhances mitochondrial function, potentially allowing those with the diseases to live longer, healthier lives.
A paper on the methylene blue study, conducted by Hani Atamna, PhD, and a his team at Children's, was published in the March 2008 issue of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) Journal. Dr. Atamna's research found that methylene blue can prevent or slow the decline of mitochondrial function, specifically an important enzyme called complex IV. Because mitochondria are the principal suppliers of energy to all animal and human cells, their healthy function is critical.
(Excerpt) Read more at sciencedaily.com ...
Read later.
After you discover it worked once. You give high doses to lab rats and keep reducing the dose until it quits killing them. Then you give it to infected rats in ever smaller doses until it quits curing them. The effective dose is somewhere in that range between doesn’t work and kills you.
Step two is to extrapolate the quantity to humans and work from the minimum effective dose up to the point it turns the whites of your eyes blue.
However, this is all academic because with the Obama Health Plan there won’t be any research that matters.
Just the mention of the name gave me flashbacks of two weeks in a piss-smelling, yellowing wall room in an African country I will not name.
Fever. Chills. Fever. Chills. Sh!tting out my entire intestinal system. Fever. Chills.
Probably one of the lowest points of my life.
Bump
And malaria is so preventable and so treatable. Anyway glad you survived to tell the story
The problem in the case of diabetes research is that rodent results are notoriously unreliable predictors of how humans will respond to the same treatment. They've "cured" diabetes in mice several different ways, bot those treatments have not been successful on humans.
Moreover, just the fact that you haven't seen it in the news doesn't mean researchers aren't looking at it. I would suspect that one of the biggest initial barriers to even contemplating a capscacin treatment is how to deliver it to the pancreas in the first place: that's a huge engineering problem in and of itself. And then, once the engineering is done, there's the expense and difficulty of human testing. It takes years to go from mice to humans....
interesting... thanks. I’ll pass it along to him.
So it will be available to the public in about 100 years?
Who’d thought it? The antidote for cyanide poisoning and the primary stain of the Graham Stain for bacteria is the cure for Alzheimer’s.
PING
Cowdini is way too clever for a cow.
Waaaay too clever.
You can go out and buy it today, if you really want to.
And yes unfortunately clinical trials take time.
Yeah, but absolutely hilarious when you’re dealing with a bunch of MIT freshmen who are not generally social lions in high school and who may have never gotten drunk in their lives before.
It’s easier on the rats if you work up from the small doses...
So, I take it you’ve never been married, nu?
She’s watching you.
And taking notes.
For Gary Larson...
But do you still look like a Fremen ? ;-)
Now what's this Alzheimer stuff..?
Turns eyes blue and pee green?
Hmmm... might as well mess the cow up a bit.
Make it look obviously alien.
Maybe then it won't keep coming out of the enclosure to stop me in the road.
I hope this is true. God, do we need it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.