Amanda Gardner, HealthDay Reporter, "Lipitor May Aid Memory in Alzheimer's: A small study finds a big change, but it needs confirmation, experts say." (9 Nov 2004, drkoop.com)
Leading Text: "A widely used cholesterol-lowering drug improved memory and cognition as well as depressive symptoms in people with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, according to results of a small study. "This is the first investigational use in 10 years of an FDA-approved drug that shows promise in Alzheimer's," said study author Larry Sparks, head of the Roberts Laboratory for Neurodegenerative Disease Research at Sun Health Research Institute in Sun City, Ariz. "We did find significant changes in a small group of patients..."[FullText] [Neurobiol Lipids Statin collection]
A semi-fiction mystery novel "The Alzheimer Code" is under preparation. In this book the death of the President of the United States of America is followed by his preventive anti-amyloid vaccination against Alzheimer's disease. At the same time and for the same reason, in his agony of death Editor-in-Chief of London-based Nature science journal recalls he in fact witnessed the corruption of Alzheimer's pseudo-science, brought to the community by a keen student. This is a story of a corrupted Harvard University professor, a research center co-director and a godfather of the international network of science criminals. Be the first to know when Alzheimer Code is published, by subscribing to an AlzClub.org news alerts . Otherwise automate your Alzheimer’s information portfolio with a number of options presented at this page.
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Do you know that as of May 3, 2005 NIH asks NIH-funded scientists to deposit their articles (published earlier in scientific journals) in PubMedCentral (PMC)? PMC is accessible to all for free and is one form of the academic world movement towards Public Open Access to scholar literature, free from commercial publishers' cabal. New to Open Access? Then you miss important science publishing development, because an NIH provision became a US law at the end of 2007. Read lay language article on Open Access authored by AlzClub founder. NIH-funded authors: visit the NIH Manuscript Submission system for more information.
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