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You Can Teach An Old Dog New
Tricks With The Right
Diet
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These supplements, acetyl-l-carnitine and alpha lipoic acid,
are continuing to be studied in work with humans, and
scientists believe they may provide a new approach to the
neurodegeneration and cognitive decline common with
aging.
The newest study was just published in FASEB Journal,
produced by the Federation of American Societies for
Experimental Biology, by researchers from the Linus Pauling
Institute at Oregon State University, the University of
Toronto, University of California/Berkeley, Children’s Hospital
Oakland Research Institute, and Juvenon, Inc.
It found that supplements of these two antioxidant
compounds, which are believed to play a role in slowing
mitochondrial decay in the cell, significantly increased the
ability of “geriatric” beagle dogs to learn a new task.
The study builds on similar findings made several years ago,
done with mice and published in Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. In that research, the activity and energy
level of old rats taking these same supplements almost doubled,
and memory and cognitive function improved.
“The prospects for cognitive improvement from use of these
supplements is both fascinating and exciting,” said Tory Hagen,
an associate professor in OSU’s Linus Pauling Institute, and
recognized expert on the biological processes of aging.
“This is the first time these two compounds, by themselves,
have been tested in canines, which have brains that are more
biologically similar to humans than some other animal models,”
Hagen said. “The results should be relevant to what we could
expect with humans, and are very encouraging.”
In this study, an inbred line of older, very similar beagle
dogs were taught how to find a food treat by identifying
certain markers, such as a yellow wooden peg. Applied scents
were used to control for any tip-off by sense of smell. Some
dogs received short-term dietary supplementation with
acetyl-l-carnitine and lipoic acid, and others did not.
On one task, four of six dogs receiving supplements quickly
learned to find the food treat by identifying the correct
marker, while only two of six dogs on normal diet succeeded.
After 15 more weeks of training, more than 80 percent of
supplemented dogs were successful, while only 50 percent of
those not receiving supplements could learn the new task.
“We’ve shown in some previous animal work that these
supplements could improve memory and energy level,” Hagen said.
“Now we’re seeing that animals receiving supplements are much
more readily able to learn new things as well, even at an
advanced age.”
In these tests, the effects of supplementation with these
compounds appeared to work fairly quickly, in a matter of days
or weeks, the scientists said. Some other studies, however,
have required much longer periods of supplementation for
various antioxidants to improve cognitive performance.
Humans also experience loss of the type of object and
spatial discrimination that was improved by supplements in
these animal tests – it’s often one of the early signs of human
dementia.
The scientists suggested in the paper that long-term
supplementation “may be effective in attenuating age-associated
cognitive decline by slowing the rate of mitochondrial decay
and cellular aging.” Enhancing the function of mitochondria -
which provide almost all of a cell’s energy - could literally
be providing animals with more “mental energy,” leading to
improved memory and learning, the study indicated. The
compounds may also cause increased synthesis of a
neurotransmitter called acetylcholine.
An increasing body of research suggests that mitochondria
may be an “Achilles heel” for absorbing age-related damage, as
part of the natural process of oxidation in the body and the
related “free radicals” that are produced and can cause
cellular damage. As the power plant of cells, mitochondria
perform many of the roles critical to cell function, use up to
90 percent of the oxygen humans breathe, but are also among the
first cellular components to be damaged by reactive radical
oxygen species.
This study was funded by private industry, including
companies that produce the compounds being studied.
Clinical experiments with humans using these supplements are
already under way, scientists said.
Source
-
Science
Daily
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