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What to know about new research indicating lithium can help protect against Alzheimer's disease
What to know about new research indicating lithium can help protect against Alzheimer's disease

Boston Globe

time5 days ago

  • Health
  • Boston Globe

What to know about new research indicating lithium can help protect against Alzheimer's disease

The researchers studied brain tissue of about 400 people post mortem, as well as blood samples and a battery of memory tests performed yearly before their death. The scientists found higher levels of lithium in cognitively healthy people. But as sticky clumps of protein, known as amyloid plaques, began forming in their brains in the early stages of dementia, the amyloid trapped the lithium, restraining it and reducing its availability to surrounding brain cells. That depleted the lithium even in parts of the brain that were amyloid-free, essentially reducing lithium's protective function. The researchers also fed healthy mice a lithium-restricted diet, spurring memory problems: they had trouble performing several laboratory memory tests. And finally, the researchers were also able to reverse disease-related damage and restore memory function, even in older mice with advanced disease, by returning lithium to their diet. Advertisement What kind of lithium was used in the study? The researchers used a different form of lithium than is typically used to treat psychiatric disorders, such as bipolar disorder. They used Advertisement Should you buy lithium online or in stores and start taking it? Lithium, like other supplements or vitamins sold online or in stores, is How else should I get lithium in my diet? Many foods already touted for their health benefits naturally contain higher amounts of lithium — What else can I do to lower my risk of Alzheimer's disease? Another Scientists say the new lithium findings are exciting, but urge people not to rush out and buy supplements before researchers can test lithium orotate in a large clinical trial with one group of participants receiving small doses of lithium orotate and the others a sham substance, to compare the findings. The trials would need to identify the dosage and duration of time for taking the substance. Advertisement Kay Lazar can be reached at

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