Alzheimer's Reversed in Mice by Restoring Brain Energy Balance
Scientists have achieved a groundbreaking reversal of Alzheimer's disease in mice, fully restoring memory and repairing brain damage. The study, published in Cell Reports Medicine, identifies restoring the brain's energy balance via NAD+ levels as a key to recovery.
- Researchers successfully reversed Alzheimer's pathology and restored cognitive function in mice.
- The breakthrough challenges the long-held belief that Alzheimer's is irreversible.
- Restoring cellular energy molecule NAD+ levels in the brain proved crucial.
- The treatment repaired major brain damage even in advanced disease stages.
- Normalized blood biomarkers (tau 217) confirmed disease reversal in mice.
- Findings offer new hope for future human Alzheimer's therapies.
Read the full story on Quick Digest.