Pr0gr3s
Pr0gr3s t1_j48zb9l wrote
Reply to comment by glawgii in A systematic review and meta-analysis shows that the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages was positively associated with an increased risk of metabolic syndrome. by glawgii
Is that really how the authors defined it? Hyperinsulinemia getting no love.
Pr0gr3s t1_j0piyww wrote
Reply to comment by Ferris440 in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
See my comment above, but you're thinking of GLUT4.
Pr0gr3s t1_j0pivn4 wrote
Reply to comment by r0cafe1a in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
There have been several trials with metformin. Mixed results I believe, but there's certainly something there.
Ketogenic diet confuses me as well. I've always assumed that effect is mostly mediated by immune regulation, but I'm not sure.
Pr0gr3s t1_j0pic39 wrote
Reply to comment by I_Mix_Stuff in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
It's more "type 3", since the diabetic types aren't stages. Also, patients can show brain insulin resistance without showing peripheral insulin resistance (diabetes). That's the crazy part.
Pr0gr3s t1_j0ph8te wrote
Reply to comment by jawshoeaw in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
This is an old and thoroughly disproven concept that wont seem to die. The brain is absolutely responsive to insulin. GLUT4 is highly expressed in some parts of the brain and requires insulin binding to translocate from storage vehicles to the plasma membrane. Hippocampal memory gets a lot of focus in this regard, which dovetails into Alzheimer's.
Pr0gr3s t1_j0pf7iu wrote
Reply to comment by Wazootyman13 in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
If you manage your insulin levels well, exercise, and keep a good diet then your risk levels will be about the same as the general population.
(This is pretty much my scientific wheelhouse)
Pr0gr3s t1_iwnxqdq wrote
Reply to comment by PMzyox in At CBD:THC ratios most common in medicinal and recreational cannabis products, no evidence found that adding CBD protects against the impairment or subjective effects of THC/cannabis - a randomised double-blind trial with 46 people. by drdrugsandbrains
45 is actually a decent N for a RCT with a within subjects design. The design increases statistical power significantly over a between subjects design, which is likely what you are picturing.
Pr0gr3s t1_j5rune7 wrote
Reply to comment by BigBooPeep in Epidemiological evidence that Alzheimer's and Parkinson's could be caused by viral infections. Around 81% of viruses were found to be neurotrophic, which indicates that they can attack the central nervous system (CNS) via peripheral nerves or by crossing the blood-brain barrier by Wagamaga
He probably had familial Alzheimer's, which is genetic and can occur much younger. We understand fAD pretty well, although that doesn't mean we can doing anything.
This article is talking about sporadic AD, which is around 95pct of cases.