What is Alzheimers Disease

Alzheimer's disease (AD), a neurodegenerative disease, is the most common cause of dementia and characterized clinically by progressive cognitive deterioration together with declin...

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Vitamin B3 reduces Alzheimer's symptoms, lesions
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An over-the-counter vitamin in high doses prevented memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s disease, and UC Irvine scientists now are conducting a clinical trial to determine its effect in humans.

Nicotinamide, a form of vitamin B3, lowered levels of a protein called phosphorylated tau that leads to the development of tangles, one of two brain lesions associated with Alzheimer’s disease. The vitamin also strengthened scaffolding along which information travels in brain cells, helping to keep neurons alive and further preventing symptoms in mice genetically wired to develop Alzheimer’s.

“Nicotinamide has a very robust effect on neurons,” said Kim Green, UCI scientist and lead author of the study. “Nicotinamide prevents loss of cognition in mice with Alzheimer’s disease, and the beauty of it is we already are moving forward with a clinical trial.”

The study appears online Nov. 5 in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Nicotinamide is a water-soluble vitamin sold in health food stores. It generally is safe but can be toxic in very high doses. Clinical trials have shown it benefits people with diabetes complications and has anti-inflammatory properties that may help people with skin conditions.

Nicotinamide belongs to a class of compounds called HDAC inhibitors, which have been shown to protect the central nervous system in rodent models of Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Clinical trials are underway to learn whether HDAC inhibitors help ALS and Huntington’s patients.

In the nicotinamide study, Green and his colleague, Frank LaFerla, added the vitamin to drinking water fed to mice. They tested the rodents’ short-term and long-term memory over time using water-maze and object-recognition tasks and found that treated Alzheimer’s mice performed at the same level as normal mice, while untreated Alzheimer’s mice experienced memory loss.

The nicotinamide, in fact, slightly enhanced cognitive abilities in normal mice. “This suggests that not only is it good for Alzheimer’s disease, but if normal people take it, some aspects of their memory might improve,” said LaFerla, UCI neurobiology and behavior professor.

Scientists also found that the nicotinamide-treated animals had dramatically lower levels of the tau protein that leads to the Alzheimer’s tangle lesion. The vitamin did not affect levels of the protein beta amyloid, which clumps in the brain to form plaques, the second type of Alzheimer’s lesion.

Nicotinamide, they found, led to an increase in proteins that strengthen microtubules, the scaffolding within brain cells along which information travels. When this scaffolding breaks down, the brain cells can die. Neuronal death leads to dementia experienced by Alzheimer’s patients.

“Microtubules are like highways inside cells. What we’re doing with nicotinamide is making a wider, more stable highway,” Green said. “In Alzheimer’s disease, this highway breaks down. We are preventing that from happening.”

LaFerla and Green are affiliated with the Institute for Brain Aging and Dementia, which is conducting the clinical trial with funding from the Alzheimer’s Association.

The institute seeks volunteers who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, are 50 or older, and have a friend or relative who can accompany them to clinic visits and answer questions. Study participants will take the vitamin supplement or a placebo twice daily for 24 weeks, with seven visits to the UCI clinic.

For more information on the clinical trial, contact Beatriz Yanez at 949-824-5733.

UCI scientists Joan Steffan, Hilda Martinez-Coria, Xuemin Sun, Steven Schreiber and Leslie Thompson also worked on the study, which was supported in part by the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.


About the University of California, Irvine: The University of California, Irvine is a top-ranked university dedicated to research, scholarship and community service. Founded in 1965, UCI is among the fastest-growing University of California campuses, with more than 27,000 undergraduate and graduate students and nearly 2,000 faculty members. The third-largest employer in dynamic Orange County, UCI contributes an annual economic impact of $3.6 billion. For more UCI news, visit www.today.uci.edu.

News Radio: UCI maintains on campus an ISDN line for conducting interviews with its faculty and experts. The use of this line is available free-of-charge to radio news programs/stations who wish to interview UCI faculty and experts. Use of the ISDN line is subject to availability and approval by the university.
Posted on 12/12/08, 02:12 pm
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Reply #1 - 04/21/09  7:29am
" Thanks my mother inlaw has ad and i was told to give her vb3 to "
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Reply #2 - 04/21/09  12:20pm
" Thanks for putting that up again. I went to a lecture with Dr. Wolf from UCLA last year and B-3 (niacin) was one of the things he recommended for all AD patients
He also strongly recommended curcumin (an extract from turmeric) which can be bought online fairly cheaply and has been shown to slow, stop and in some cases even reverse AD in lab studies with mice.
Dr Wolf said he perscribes it, even though it's an otc supplement, to his entire family and all his patients.
It is good to know that there are some things, besides meds, that can help with this condition and I feel very positive that our using them has contributed greatly to my husbands being able to maintain at as high a level of cognitive ability as he has for so long do to them.
The quick/short list of "brain" stuff Fox and others have recommended to us is:
Niacin (B-3)
Curcumin
Fish oil
Vitamin E
Using those supplements along wiht eating a more mediterrainan diet are beneficial to brain and heart health. "
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Reply #3 - 04/22/09  9:18am
" Thank you so much for this info. I did a little research on Vitamin B3 and I guess we can get a little of it from some foods: Beef Liver, Peanuts, canned tuna in water, chicken, Cherios Cereal.

Its so great to hear from those who are actually suffering from the disease. All of you are so brave and you are such an inspiration. Millie "
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Reply #4 - 05/03/09  9:45pm
" Yes, and also Vitamin B12 Lozenges with Folic acid!!

We get our supplements from www.iherb.com. They seem to be the best with prices so far and we do our best to get food derived supplements.
Halime "
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Reply #5 - 05/19/09  3:40pm
" I am going to get the VB3 for myself. I am only 40 years old but I can take anything that might help me. "
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Reply #6 - 05/21/09  8:26am
" I did not see the recommended dosage? I found this at the health food store but can anyone let me know what the recommended milligrams dosage would be???
Thanks,
Halime "
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Reply #7 - 05/21/09  8:35am
" My husband takes B-12 with Folic Acid in capsule form, as a recommendation from an earlier doctor. His current doctor, while not taking him off of it, said it does no good at all because B-12 is destroyed in the stomach and in order to be effective it has to be injected. Is this true? and is it the same with the B3? My husband takes so many meds now, I wonder about drug interaction. "
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Reply #8 - 05/21/09  2:17pm
" No, b-3 is not destroyed in the stomach like b-12 is. I believe the recommended dosage is 40mg a day. According to the fda that is a couple hundred percent of the amount they think you need.
What most people do not understand about those dosages you see on the side of vitamins, etc. is that they are talking about the amount a HEALTHY person needs to have each day to prevent the diseases each vitamin is known to prevent such as vitamin C preventing scurvery (sp) it is not the amount someone sufferring from an illness needs which can be very much higher especialy for the "water soluable" vitamins like the B's which are flushed out of your system when you urinate. "
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Reply #9 - 07/03/09  12:04am
" We don't use any prescription drugs because we just prefer natural methods. We use "Source Naturals, Advanced B-12 Complex, 5 mg, 60 Tablets" Sublingual is the key here folks. Dissolves under the tongue. We purchase our goods from www.iherb.com. They seem to have the best prices so far. "

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