Recent studies have highlighted new approaches in the fight against Alzheimer's disease, focusing on non-invasive therapies. Research involving mouse studies has shown that gamma-wave therapy, which includes light and sound stimulation at 40 Hertz, can activate the brain's self-cleaning functions, reducing Alzheimer's-associated plaques. Additionally, a study published in Nature by MIT scientists, led by Dr. Li-Huei Tsai and M. Murdock, demonstrates that 40Hz light and sound stimulation can increase peptide release from interneurons, thereby driving the clearance of Alzheimer's protein through the brain's glymphatic system. This experimental treatment, aimed at slowing cognitive decline, enhances the brain's waste disposal networks. Furthermore, other research indicates that belly fat in middle-aged adults with a family history of Alzheimer's disease is linked to brain health, with a more pronounced connection in men. Separate studies have also explored the benefits of yoga in improving brain health among older women at risk for Alzheimer's.
After 40 years of research, scientists in 2018 appeared to have identified the protein that converts sound waves into signals for our brains. #ScienceMagArchives https://t.co/5qPgGjId5b
"Studies at @MIT and elsewhere are producing mounting evidence that light flickering and sound clicking at the gamma brain rhythm frequency of 40 Hz can reduce #Alzheimers disease progression and treat symptoms in human volunteers." https://t.co/8mRtgXybF1
“Scientists Discover Biological Mechanism of Hearing Loss Caused by Loud Noise – And a Potential Solution” Article: https://t.co/SWrqfaZkxw
In a new study, yoga appears to have bolstered the brain health of older women who had risk factors for Alzheimer's disease. https://t.co/UMTRkEH8Cs
An experimental Alzheimer's treatment involving sounds and flickering lights may slow cognitive decline by ramping up our brain's waste disposal networks. https://t.co/Hof04Jct4v
Belly fat is associated with brain health in middle-aged adults with a family history of Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study. However, this link is more conspicuous in men. https://t.co/MgewHscTA0
“Flickering Light Can Slow Alzheimer's Disease, MIT Scientists Say” Article: https://t.co/4t6DvX9VqF
In @Nature today: 40Hz light and sound stimulation increases peptide release from interneurons, driving clearance of #Alzheimers protein via the brain’s glymphatic system. Study led by @DrLiHueiTsai, @mhmurdock1. https://t.co/FmEO4R8UJE @mitscience @mitbrainandcog
Now new mouse studies have revealed that #gamma-wave therapy (light and sound stimulation at 40 Hertz) can assist in exciting the brain's self-cleaning functions and reducing the plaques that are at the heart of the Alzheimer's condition. https://t.co/BuFdWRFmIy