Daily Express

Dementia breakthrou­gh

Oxygen treatment ‘improves memory and concentrat­ion’

- By Sarah O’Grady Social Affairs Correspond­ent

BOOSTING brains with extra oxygen could delay or even reverse the impact of dementia.

Five 90-minute oxygen treatments a week for three months improved the memory of six pensioners in a small-scale trial.

The procedure – called hyperbaric oxygen therapy – involves patients inhaling oxygen through a mask in a pressurise­d chamber.

It significan­tly increases the amount of oxygen in the body’s tissues, which has previously been found to encourage healing.

When the treatment was administer­ed to mice, it reduced amyloid plaques in the brain. They are a telltale sign of Alzheimer’s disease.

In humans the researcher­s spotted “significan­t” increases of 16 to 23 per cent in blood flow in several parts of the brain.

The volunteers also scored 16.5 per cent higher on subsequent memory tests, six per cent more on concentrat­ion and 10.3 per cent higher on informatio­n processing. The researcher­s said the treatment probably expanded the width of blood vessels and reduced the thickness of blood vessel walls, allowing for increased blood flow.

Reduced blood flow to the brain has already been linked with the onset of dementia. Prof Uri Ashery, an expert in neurobiolo­gy at Israel’s Tel Aviv University, said: “Elderly patients suffering from significan­t memory loss revealed an increase in brain blood flow and improvemen­t in cognitive performanc­e.”

This demonstrat­ed the “potency” to reverse core elements responsibl­e for dementia.

Professor Tom Dening, of Nottingham University, said: “If we consider that the number of people with dementia in the UK is approachin­g one million, it is hard to see how hyperbaric oxygen could ever be available on this scale.”

The study, in the journal Ageing. examined six patients aged around 70 who had mild cognitive impairment, which can act as an early sign of Alzheimer’s.

 ??  ?? New hope...Prof Uri Ashery
New hope...Prof Uri Ashery

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