ALZHEIMER’S ZAPPER
Landmark trial sends electric currents deep into the brain
NEUROLOGISTS are to start treating Alzheimer’s patients by sending electrical currents deep into their brain.
A team at Imperial College London and the UK Dementia Research Institute have been given a $1.5million (€1.3million) grant by US philanthropists, including Bill Gates, to trial the remarkable technology.
Researchers have selected 24 patients with early-stage Alzheimer’s to undergo the therapy, which will involve two weeks of daily hour-long sessions.
After dozens of failed trials for dementia drugs, experts have high hopes for this new method.
The technology – which is called temporal interference brain stimulation – involves applying electrodes to the scalp.
The electrodes then send two harmless high-frequency beams into the brain.
These beams are of slightly different frequencies – 2,000 Hz and 2,005 Hz – and when they cross they create a third current, a lowfrequency wave of 5 Hz. And it is this new wave which researchers hope will make all the difference.
It will be triggered in the hippocampus – an area deep in the brain which is responsible for forming new memories.
This will hopefully revive the area’s mitochondria, the energy source in every cell, which become damaged by Alzheimer’s.
The two original beams are at too high a frequency to interfere with the healthy brain tissue through which they pass.
But the new wave will have the same frequency at which brain cells fire – allowing it to spark diseased neurones back into action.
Tests on healthy volunteers show the technique increases blood flow to the brain and results in improved results in facial-recognition tests. But the new trial, which will start in January, will be the first time patients with Alzheimer’s undergo the treatment.
Researcher Dr Nir Grossman said: ‘There is more and more evidence that mitochondrial dysfunction plays an important role in Alzheimer’s disease. This is an important milestone for us, concluding years of work on a breakthrough technological development.’
There are around 55,000 people in Ireland who suffer with dementia.
The trial is one of 16 given grants by the $60million (€51million) Part The Cloud programme – a scheme funded by philanthropists Bill Gates and Mikey Hoag, and the US Alzheimer’s Association.
Microsoft billionaire Mr Gates, 64, has spoken of how he witnessed the effects of the disease firsthand and said finding a treatment ‘needs increased and continued research investments’.
‘This is an important milestone for us’