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Anti-Hypertensive drugs may help prevent and
treat Alzheimer’s Disease
Newswise — A new study has identified
commonly prescribed drugs for the treatment
of hypertension may be capable of preventing
Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive
deterioration.
Study Results
Over the past two years, investigators
directed at Mount Sinai have been screening
more than 1,500 drugs that are already
commercially available for treatment of
other disorders, to determine their
potential value in treating Alzheimer's
disease and cognitive impairment.
Based on the outcomes from initial drug
screening, Dr. Pasinetti and his
collaborators identified 7out of 55
candidate drugs commonly prescribed for the
treatment of hypertension, which are capable
of significantly preventing beta-amyloid
production, which is a major mechanism
recently identified as playing a key role in
Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis,
particularly in respect to promotion of
memory loss and dementia.
The new research, published in the November
2007 issue of the The Journal of Clinical
Investigation, conducted by Dr. Giulio Maria
Pasinetti, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of
Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Geriatrics and
Adult Development and Director of the Center
of Excellence for Research in Complementary
and Alternative Medicine in Alzheimer's
disease at Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
suggests that a large number of geriatric
patients currently under pharmacological
treatment for high-blood pressure with
certain anti-hypertensive drugs might reap
the additional benefits of the drug's
cognitive effects.
"If we can deliver certain anti-hypertensive
drugs to patients at high risk to develop
Alzheimer’s disease, at doses that do not
affect blood pressure, these drugs could be
made available for all members of the
geriatric population identified as being at
high risk for developing Alzheimer's
disease," said Dr. Pasinetti.
In this new study, Dr. Pasinetti reports
that mice genetically determined to develop
Alzheimer’s disease beta-amyloid production
and subsequent cognitive deterioration,
significantly benefit from the treatment
with the anti-hypertensive agent Valsartan,
found to pharmacologically prevent beta-amyloid
production in the brain even when delivered
to Alzheimer’ disease mice at doses 3-4 fold
lower than the minimal equivalent dose
prescribed for the treatment of hypertension
in humans. Other anti-hypertension drugs
with beneficial results included Propranolol
HCI, Carvedilol, Losartan, Nicardipine HCI,
Amiloride HCI and Hydralazine HCI.
Showing the use of anti-hypertensive drugs
with anti- beta-amyloid production
activities in the brain of Alzheimer’
disease mice, will help in the
identification of future, novel disease-
modifying pharmacological treatments for the
prevention of cognitive deterioration and
eventually dementia in Alzheimer's disease.
Future Research
Dr. Pasinetti recognizes the limitations of
the research, noting that studies must be
immediately verified in human subjects to
verify the effect of the drugs on cognitive
deterioration and memory functions
independent of their role as an
anti-hypertensive agent.
"The use of these drugs for their potential
anti-Alzheimer’s disease role is still
highly experimental, and at this stage we
have no clinical data beyond
phenomenological observation in humans" said
Dr. Pasinetti. "We need to complete
preventive and therapeutic clinical trials
in the near future if we are to identify
certain anti-hypertensive drugs with anti
beta-amyloid antioligomeric activities,
which will need to be prescribed at dosages
that do not interfere with blood pressure in
normotensive Alzheimer’s disease patients."
Dr. Pasinetti's research is part of a
growing push to identify and develop more
effective treatments for Alzheimer's
disease. This devastating, degenerative
illness is of particular concern for baby
boomers beginning to turn 60, at increased
risk of developing cognitive deterioration
and Alzheimer's disease.
About The Mount Sinai Medical Center
The Mount Sinai Medical Center encompasses
The Mount Sinai Hospital and Mount Sinai
School of Medicine. The Mount Sinai Hospital
is one of the nation’s oldest, largest and
most-respected voluntary hospitals. Founded
in 1852, Mount Sinai today is a 1,171-bed
tertiary-care teaching facility that is
internationally acclaimed for excellence in
clinical care. Last year, nearly 50,000
people were treated at Mount Sinai as
inpatients, and there were nearly 450,000
outpatient visits to the Medical Center.
Mount Sinai
School of Medicine is internationally
recognized as a leader in groundbreaking
clinical and basic-science research, as well
as having an innovative approach to medical
education. With a faculty of more than 3,400
in 38 clinical and basic science departments
and centers, Mount Sinai ranks among the top
20 medical schools in receipt of National
Institute of Health (NIH) grants.
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