Medication that, up until now, has been difficult to administer for the treatment of
Alzheimer's Disease, has just been made useful by using a nanoscale silicone chip to "trick" the blood-brain barrier (BBB) into allow the drugs' entry, according to new research by the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in partnership with Bar Ilan University. The researchers claim that such a breakthrough may inhibit the development of the disease. The discovery was made by Professor Ester Segal and Michal Rosenberg from the Technion Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Engineering, along with Professor Orit Shefi and Neta Zilony-Hanin from the Bar Ilan University Faculty of Engineering. The disease is a neurodegenerative disease, which means it originates in the brain cells. The major cause of Alzheimer's is an accumulation of a protein called amyloid beta in brain tissues, which kills the neurons in different regions of the brain. Such damage can harm mechanisms essential to brain functionality. Ideally, administering a neural growth factor (a specific protein) would limit the damage of the disease, but such a task is no easy feat: the BBB protects the brain from being infiltrated by harmful bacteria and other dangerous substances and, in the process, rejects drugs intended to treat the disease. The new nanoscale silicon chips developed by the research team should solve this major disadvantage, as they are capable inserting the protein directly into the brain and allowing it, in turn, to be released into the targeted tissue. This would allow the protein to enter the brain without having to cross the BBB because the chip would be inserted, either by implanting or by being sent to target microparticles using a dedicated gene gun. The protein is released from the chip once reaching its destination, which is when the chip breaks down into non-toxic components.
Alzheimer's Disease is the most common form of dementia and is characterized by symptoms including memory loss, speech impairments, orientation problems, and a significant impairment of motor functions. It primarily strikes the elderly population and, with the rise in life-expectancy worldwide, the disease has now been considered an epidemic among the elderly, or the "21st century plague." Israel has previously made major advancements in Alzheimer's research; Hadassah Ein Kerem managed to procure a new medical test in August that could help doctors prevent the onset of the disease, as well as discover new and better treatments for it. Research conducted in the Joseph Sagol Neuroscience Center of Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer suggests that there is a causal link between diabetes and Alzheimer's Disease.
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