See these brain scans above? The one of the left is a normal, healthy brain. The less colorful one on the right belongs to a person with Alzheimer's caused by the death of brain tissue which impairs brain activity. But a new compound being tested on mice is helping scientists to come up with a cure.
The compound was used on mice suffering from prion disease, which is a condition characterized by the production of faulty, or misfolded, proteins (basically an Alzheimer's version for mice). When the mice received the new oral treatment, the compound shut down the pathway responsible for this cognitive degeneration.
However, the downside of the treatment was that it wrecked other organs
like the pancreas, resulting in severe weight loss and diabetes. Nevertheless, the researchers believe this could be a turning point in the search for medicines to control and prevent Alzheimer's disease.
Read the entire study in
Science