Antihypertensive drugs may protect
against Alzheimer's disease independent from reduction of blood pressure lowering
activities
Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found
that the drug carvedilol, currently prescribed for the treatment of hypertension,
may lessen the degenerative impact of Alzheimer's disease and promote healthy
memory functions. The new findings are published in two studies in the current
issues of Neurobiology of Aging and the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.
"These studies are certainly very exciting, and suggest for the first
time that certain antihypertensive drugs already available to the public may independently
influence memory functions while reducing degenerative pathological features of
the Alzheimer's disease brain," said study author Giulio Maria Pasinetti,
M.D., Ph.D., Saunders Family Professor of Neurology and Director of the Center
of Excellence for Novel Approaches to Neurotherapeutics at Mount Sinai School
of Medicine.
Dr. Pasinetti's team found for the first time that carvedilol, a blood pressure
lowering agent, is capable of exerting activities that significantly reduce Alzheimer's
disease-type brain and memory degeneration. This benefit was achieved without
blood pressure lowering activity in mice genetically modified to develop Alzheimer's
disease brain degeneration and memory impairment. These data were published in
Neurobiology of Aging.
In a second study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, the research
team led by Dr. Pasinetti assessed how mice learned new tasks and information
and recall of past information chemically stored in the brain. They found that
carvedilol treatment was capable of promoting memory function, based on assessments
of learning new tasks and information and recall of past information, which is
already chemically stored in the brain.
In the study, one group of mice received carvedilol treatment and the other
group did not. The scientists conducted behavioral and learning tests with each
group of mice, and determined that it took the mice in the carvedilol significantly
less time to remember tasks than the other group.
"Ongoing clinical research is in progress to test the benefits of carvedilol,
which may prove to be an effective agent in the treatment of symptoms of Alzheimer's
disease," said Dr. Pasinetti. "We look forward to further studying this
drug in the human population."
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