Eating a curry once or twice a week could help
prevent the onset of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. The magic
ingredient in curry is curcumin, a component of the spice,
turmeric.
Professor Murali Doraiswamy, director of the
Mental Fitness Laboratory at the Department of Psychiatry, Duke
University Medical Center, Carolina, told delegates at the Royal
College of Psychiatrists’ Annual Meeting in Liverpool that curcumin
prevented the spread of amyloid plaques, found outside brain cells.
These plaques, along with neurofibrillary tangles, are thought to
contribute to the degradation of the wiring in brain cells and lead
to the subsequent symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.
Professor Doraiswamy said: “There is very
solid evidence that curcumin binds to plaques, and basic research
on animals engineered to produce human amyloid plaques has shown
benefits. Turmeric has been studied not just in Alzheimer’s
research but for a variety of conditions, such as cancer and
arthritis. Turmeric is often referred to as the spice of life in
ancient Indian medical lore.”
A clinical trial is now underway at the
University of California, Los Angeles, to test curcumin’s effects
in human Alzheimer’s patients and specifically on their amyloid
plaque proteins. A small pilot trail was completed to determine the
right dose and researchers have now embarked on a larger study.
Professor Doraiswamy told the Royal College of
Psychiatrists’ Annual Meeting: “You can modify a mouse so that at
about 12 months its brain is riddled with plaques. If you feed this
rat a curcumin-rich diet it dissolves these plaques. The same diet
prevented younger mice from forming new plaques. The next step is
to test curcumin on human amyloid plaque formation using newer
brain scans and there are plans for that.”
Studies looking at populations show that
people who eat a curry meal two or three times a week seem to have
a lower risk for dementia, he told the Annual Meeting. “Those
studies seem to show that you need only consume what is part of the
normal diet – but the research studies are testing higher doses to
see if they can maximise the effect. It would be equivalent of
going on a curry spree for a week.”
However, curry may be just one of the
ingredients that prevent degeneration of the brain. “If you
are eating fatty burgers and smoking then don’t expect an
occasional curry to counterbalance a poor lifestyle. However, if
you have a good diet and take plenty of exercise, eating curry
regularly could help prevent dementia,” he said.
Turmeric is also found in mustard and
Professor Doraiswamy predicted a day when – for those unable, or
unwilling, to consume curries regularly – the public might be
advised to take a ’curry’ pill every day if the findings are
confirmed in human studies.
Professor Doraiswamy and other scientists are
testing a brain PET scan which can detect the prevalence of plaques
in the living brain. At the moment, a definitive diagnosis can be
made only after the patient has died. A second scan also being
developed can detect both plaques and tangles – both of which are
present in Alzheimer’s.
Many leading drugs being developed are
targeting the plaques, said Professor Doraiswamy, and clinicians
were prescribing these dugs “blindly” without knowing the plaque
load in the brain. He said: “The hope is that with the PET scans
you can scan their brains, find out whether their plaque load is
high or low, and tailor treatment. If their plaque load is low,
then you have to question the diagnosis.”
Some 20-30 per cent of diagnoses were wrong,
said Professor Doraiswamy, and the condition could be vascular
dementia or any number of other conditions masquerading as
Alzheimer’s. “If you gave that person treatment it wouldn’t help –
it would be a waste of money and in some cases hurt”.
The professor said it was conceivable in the
near future, when preventive therapies were available, that a
50-year-old with a strong history of Alzheimer’s could be screened
to determine the levels of plaque in their brains and then initiate
anti-plaque therapy.
Professor Doraiswamy, a leading expert on
brain health and fitness, grew up in Southern Indian town of Madras
famous for its fiery curries.
For further information, please
contact:
Liz Leicester
or Deborah Hart in the Communications
Department.
Telephone: 020 7235 2351 Extensions. 6298 or 6127
References:
Annual Meeting of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, BT Convention Centre, Liverpool, 2 -5 June 2009