HEALTH Alzheimer's disease may be infectious, study claims

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...ay-be-infectious-study-suggests-10493032.html

Alzheimer's disease may be infectious, study claims

Disturbing possibility raises questions about certain surgical procedures

Steve Connor Author Biography
Science Editor
Thursday 10 September 2015

The “seeds” of Alzheimer’s disease may be transmitted from one person to another during certain medical procedures, scientists have found.

A study into people who died of a separate kind of brain disease after receiving injections of human growth hormone suggests that Alzheimer’s may also be a transmissible disease.

The findings have raised questions about the safety of some medical procedures, possibly including blood transfusions and invasive dental treatment, which may involve the transfer of contaminated tissues or surgical equipment.

The investigation has shown for the first time in humans that Alzheimer’s disease may be a transmissible infection which could be inadvertently passed between people.

Scientists emphasised that the new evidence is still preliminary and should not stop anyone from having surgery. They have also stressed that it is not possible to “catch” Alzheimer’s by living with someone with the disease.

However, the findings of a study into eight people who were given growth hormone injections when they were children have raised the disturbing possibility that Alzheimer’s can be transmitted under certain circumstances when infected tissues or surgical instruments are passed between individuals.

Until now, it was thought that Alzheimer’s occurred only as a result of inheriting certain genetic mutations causing the familial version of the disease, or from random “sporadic” events within the brain of elderly people, said Professor John Collinge, head of neurodegenerative diseases at University College London.

“What we need to consider is that in addition to there being sporadic Alzheimer’s disease and inherited or familial Alzheimer’s disease, there could also be acquired forms of Alzheimer’s disease,” Professor Collinge said.

“You could have three different ways you have these protein seeds generated in your brain. Either they happen spontaneously, an unlucky event as you age, or you have a faulty gene, or you’ve been exposed to a medical accident. That’s what we’re hypothesising,” he said.

“It’s important to emphasise that this relates to a very special situation where people have been injected essentially with extracts of human tissue. In no way are we suggesting that Alzheimer’s is a contagious disease. You cannot catch Alzheimer’s disease by living with or caring for someone with the disease,” he added.

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The eight adults, aged between 36 and 51, all died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) after receiving contaminated hormone injections as children. But autopsies on their brains also revealed that seven of them harboured the misfolded proteins associated with the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. It is unheard of for people in this age group to have such proteins.

The scientists did not find the “tau” protein tangles associated with the later stages of the disease, which means the seven individuals did not have full-blown Alzheimer’s, although they may well have developed it had they not died of CJD, Professor Collinge said.

The study, published in the journal Nature, eliminated other possible reasons for the presence of these so-called amyloid-beta (A-beta) proteins and came to the conclusion that they were most probably transmitted as protein “seeds” in the growth-hormone injections.

Questions remain about whether these protein seeds could also be transmitted on surgical instruments used in other operations. It is well-established that the prion proteins behind CJD and Alzheimer’s stick to metal surfaces and can survive extreme sterilisation procedures such as steam cleaning and formaldehyde.

There is also the question of whether Alzheimer’s disease could be passed on in blood transfusions, given that animal experiments have shown this to be possible.

“It is not clear here that this is relevant to blood transfusions, and epidemiological studies have been done in the past looking for links between Alzheimer’s disease and blood transfusions and they have not shown an association,” Professor Collinge said.

“Certainly with vCJD, which is the form of CJD associated with mad-cow disease, there is infectivity found in the blood and there have been four documented cases in the UK of vCJD from a blood donor who went on to get vCJD, so it can occur,” he said.

Speaking at a press conference, Professor Collinge added: “Certainly there are potential risks in dentistry where it is impacting on nervous tissue, such as root-canal treatments and special precautions are taken for that reason... If you are speculating whether A-beta seeds are transmitted at all by surgical instruments one would have to consider whether certain types of dental procedures might be relevant.”

But in a statement issued later, Dr Collinge clarified that more research was needed before any conclusions could be drawn about any potential risks in current medical or dental treatments.

“Our findings relate to the specific circumstance of cadaver-derived human growth hormone injections, a treatment that was discontinued many years ago,” he said.

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“It is possible our findings might be relevant to some other medical or surgical procedures, but evaluating what risk, if any, there might be requires much further research. Our current data has no bearing on dental surgery and certainly does not argue that dentistry poses a risk of Alzheimer’s disease.”

Between 1958 and 1985 some 1,848 people in Britain, mostly children, received growth hormone injections made from tens of thousands of homogenised pituitary glands derived from the brains of human cadavers.

The NHS switched to synthetic growth hormone in 1985 when scientists realised that pituitary-derived hormone could be a route for transmitting CJD. Up to 2000, there were 38 known cases of “iatrogenic” CJD resulting from growth hormone injections in the UK, but this figure is likely to rise further because of the exceptionally long incubation period of the disease.

Of the seven patients who had the early signs of Alzheimer’s, four had severe deposits of amyloid-beta protein, three had moderate deposits and one had traces.

Dame Sally Davies, the Government’s Chief Medical Officer, played down the significance of the research yesterday saying that it was a small study on only eight samples.

“There is no evidence that Alzheimer’s disease can be transmitted in humans, nor is there any evidence that Alzheimer’s disease can be transmitted through any medical procedure,” Dame Sally said.

“I can reassure people that the NHS has extremely stringent procedures in place to minimise infection risk from surgical equipment, and patients are very well protected,” she added.

John Hardy, professor of Neuroscience at UCL, said: “I think we can be relatively sure that it is possible to transmit amyloid pathology by the injection of human tissues which contain the amyloid of Alzheimer’s disease. Does it have implications for blood transfusions? Probably not, but this definitely deserves systematic epidemiological investigation.”

Doug Brown, director of research at the Alzheimer’s Society, said: “While these findings are interesting and warrant further investigation, there are too many unknowns in this small, observational study of eight brains to draw any conclusions about whether Alzheimer’s disease can be transmitted this way.

“Injections of growth hormone taken from human brains were stopped in the 1980s. There remains absolutely no evidence that Alzheimer’s disease is contagious or can be transmitted from person to person via any current medical procedures.”

What is a prion?

Alzheimer’s disease is now considered a “prion disease”. Prions, short for proteinaceous infectious particles, are misfolded proteins that carry the ability to trigger further proteins to misfold, leading to debilitating brain disorders, such as CJD in humans, BSE in cattle and scrapie in sheep.

Prions are unique in being an infectious agent without any genes, unlike viruses or bacteria. They are extremely tenacious, sticking to metal surfaces of surgical instruments and surviving the high temperatures and chemical agents that kill off infectious viruses and microbes.

Stanley Prusiner, of the University of California, coined the word prion in the early 1980s and his pioneering work on them led to a Nobel Prize in 1997.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
The eight adults, aged between 36 and 51, all died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) after receiving contaminated hormone injections as children. But autopsies on their brains also revealed that seven of them harboured the misfolded proteins associated with the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. It is unheard of for people in this age group to have such proteins.

As I understand it, there is a form of early onset Alzheimer's which would make this "It is unheard of..." statement not precisely true.

Interesting that they are relating Alz to CJD and (NewVariant CJD) NvCJD.....
 

mudlogger

Veteran Member
I read that they don't want to autopsy CJD patients because they cannot sterilize their utensils afterwards. Makes sense that dental work could spread it.
 

WildDaisy

God has a plan, Trust it!
With a father currently wasting away in a hospital bed at home in hospice, a vegetable of what he once was, I know first-hand what Alzheimer's looks like. He was a firefighter for 45 years. He ran into danger to save others, and now no one can save him.

We lost neighbors on both sides, first the husbands, then the wives. Now my father. I truely believe it is environmental, but not transmittable. I believe it is the chemicals and junk that we now have in our diet and environment over the last 50 or so years in greater and greater amounts that is contributing to the increase in incidents.

There are increases in many diseases where the chemical overload makes sense in attacking our bodies. We weren't made to have synthetic junk in our system. We were created for all things natural for our bodies to process. Look at the increase in Fibromyalgia, diabetes, MS, Parkinsons, heart disease, cancer etc. It's epidemic. Our bodies can't handle the overload. Just like driving a car and putting in junk gas, it may run well in the beginning, but the longer you use the gas, the dirtier the car engine gets and soon something gets overloaded and blows. The same with the human body. It can't handle filtering out the increases synthetic junk we put in it and the body doesn't know what to do with it. So it stores it in cells until it can figure it out. It never does. The system slows, or stops all together. Then you get diseases.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
This is a dot. A big dot. Alzheimer's is not CJD and (NewVariant CJD) NvCJD. They all destroy the brain and have similar symptoms. CJD is very rare and some think to be spontaneous. The CJD variant comes from eating infected meat. Interesting they are lumping all three together.

http://www.cjd.ed.ac.uk/

CJD (Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease) is a rare illness and is one of a group of diseases called prion diseases, which affect humans and animals. Prion diseases exist in different forms, all of which are progressive, currently untreatable and ultimately fatal. Their name arises because they are associated with an alteration in a naturally occurring protein: the prion protein.

CJD was first described in 1920. The commonest form is called sporadic CJD and occurs worldwide causing around 1-2 deaths per million population per year. A new form of CJD (variant CJD) linked to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle was identified in 1996. There are also inherited forms of human prion disease linked to mutations of the prion protein gene and cases caused by infection via medical or surgical treatments (iatrogenic CJD).
 

The Mountain

Here since the beginning
_______________
As I understand it, there is a form of early onset Alzheimer's which would make this "It is unheard of..." statement not precisely true.

Interesting that they are relating Alz to CJD and (NewVariant CJD) NvCJD.....

It is certainly not unheard of. My stepfather's son's wife developed early onset alzheimers in her 40s, and had to be put into care well before 50 because she deteriorated so badly.
 

The Mountain

Here since the beginning
_______________
This is a dot. A big dot. Alzheimer's is not CJD and (NewVariant CJD) NvCJD. They all destroy the brain and have similar symptoms. CJD is very rare and some think to be spontaneous. The CJD variant comes from eating infected meat. Interesting they are lumping all three together.

http://www.cjd.ed.ac.uk/

CJD (Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease) is a rare illness and is one of a group of diseases called prion diseases, which affect humans and animals. Prion diseases exist in different forms, all of which are progressive, currently untreatable and ultimately fatal. Their name arises because they are associated with an alteration in a naturally occurring protein: the prion protein.

CJD was first described in 1920. The commonest form is called sporadic CJD and occurs worldwide causing around 1-2 deaths per million population per year. A new form of CJD (variant CJD) linked to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in cattle was identified in 1996. There are also inherited forms of human prion disease linked to mutations of the prion protein gene and cases caused by infection via medical or surgical treatments (iatrogenic CJD).

They're "lumping them together" because both involve nonviral proteins. They're saying that the Alzheimer's amyloids may be transmissible in somewhat the same manner as the CJD proteins. They're not saying that the two are the same thing, any more than bacterial pneumonia and plague are the same just because both are bacterial in nature.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Another angle here, a bit of a tangent and mostly male centric, is the issue of these proteins building up related to head trauma. Another is fewer people dying in their 40s from heart attacks and such living longer and having these conditions manifesting in later life.
 

Chance

Veteran Member
Hello Housecarl,

Thank you for posting this article.

I have linked a couple of youtube videos here. I have Lyme Disease and that is how I found Dr. MacDonald. I listened to his video describing his research on Alzheimer brains - he said he was consistently finding them infected with Borrelia (the causative agent of Lyme); he said he submitted his paper on this to one well known journal (JAMA, I believe) and they refused to publish it stating it would cause a panic basically; so he toned his paper down and it was published in a virology journal. (Memory not so good due to the Lyme). This is of great interest to me because I have this Borrelia infection myself and I've had many Alzheimer's-like symptoms.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44xL0z8I5X8ublished on May 18, 2014

Dr AB MacDonald describes his stunning findings of Borrelia bacteria in brain tissue of Alzheimer victims. Seven out of ten brain specimens were positive for the specific DNA of Borrelia, a microbe which causes Lyme Disease and Relapsing Fever

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r8tESJVvM88&list=PL6eKxT4Ez4qJSZmG2FSBznWg5ZxCr4m0B

This is a 30 minute video with Dr. Alan MacDonald, a retired M.D. and board certified in Anatomic Pathology and Clinical Pathology. This revealing interview from May 2013 (1 of 3) covers many of the controversies associated with Lyme disease:

- Chronic lyme disease;
- Alzheimer's and Lyme disease: microscopy and culturing brain tissue;
- How Borrelia changes and survives within the human host;
- The many strains and variations in Borrelia, how this relates to flawed testing.

Housecarl, TB2K - Dr. MacDonald's work needs to be 'verified' by a separate lab and results compared. Not publishing data because it would 'panic the public' is unacceptable. Add this to the HUGE coverup going on with Lyme Disease, this makes this absolutely believeable.

So, it is really good to see an article like this posted - questioning this whole Alzheimer's dilemma - there may be several different bugs infecting the brain that cause 'Alzheimer's Disease'. But if research is being surpressed by the CDC et al then millions of people are dying from infections that can be treated.

Cheers,

Chance
 
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WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Another big question thrown into the soup of "Why?".

I saw this article last night - interesting anecdotal situation - and an unexpected fork in the research road.
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Prions are found in soils and in plants - do we know if they can infect grains grown in prion-infected soils and become transmissible to humans that way?
 
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