Enhancing memory – foods and supplements

Ollie

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In the thread ‘How do we retain our knowledge after death?’ thread Laura quoted extracts from the C’s, three of which are given below:
20 Jan 96
Q: (P) I would like to know what I can do to improve my
memory?
A: You have sleep disorders that are "short circuiting what
would ordinarily be utterly spectacular psychic and mental
abilities. When you were very young, your senses were 10
times sharper. But then, the "interferences began."
Q: (P) That is absolutely true. I have had a sleep problem
for years. (L) Is there anything P can do to overcome
this? Physically or otherwise?
A: Cleansing of a very intensive nature; hypnotic regression;
spirit release and dietary adjustments. Also, stress
inducing life circumstances of a very "ordinary" nature
must all be deviated! Ordinary, in this instance, means
not of an ethereal nature directly.

24 Feb 96
Q: (L) Now, my memory for dates and times has always been, at
best, a little vague. But, lately, it has been really
bad. What is the cause of this loss of ability to keep a
sequential record of what one does, who one sees, etc? It
is really strange.
A: It is not strange. As one "ages" the illusion of time
passage begins to deteriorate because your "higher mind"
begins to understand the illusion.

28 Dec 96
Q: (A) I seem to be having trouble with my memory... is this related to the
emotional issues you told me about?
A: Check dietary considerations. These can either enhance or forestall the
ageing process.

Now, for me the first extract above may still be relevant, as I have posted on other threads re sleep problems and early childhood trauma, or the E-E Breathing-Meditation may provide the breakthrough to my ‘emotional constipation’ first.

The second extract is welcomed. It is the third extract, above, coupled with the first, about dietary adjustments/considerations that provokes this post.

What diet foods and supplements enhance memory /aging, and, or forestall memory / aging?

I should add that I have successfully done both the Ultra-Mind diet and the anti-Candida detox, currently I am on a diet and supplementary programme to combat Fibromyalgia, and am gradually introducing foods back in to my lifestyle from the Ultra Simple diet. I predominantly follow a blood type A diet.

Responses may be helpful to other people as well, and with other blood types I suspect.
 
Re: Enhancing your brain – foods and supplements

FWIW: http://www.cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php?topic=13259.msg130033#msg130033

This book might be helpful: http://www.moodcure.com/

The questionnaires to detect specific imbalances are here: http://www.moodcure.com/Questionnaire.html

I found the book very useful in categorizing each mood and their particular predominant neurotransmitter imbalance. It also talks about nutritional deficiencies and toxicity, and subjects in general that we had discussed here. Their questionnaires are phrased in such a way so the predominant deficiencies will be uncovered. The author also has had success in treating mood problems in her patients with rich protein diets (non toxic) and amino acids according to each imbalance. She treats and helps addicts (to alcohol, xanax, ETC) to wean off their drugs according to their neurochemical imbalances as well, that was pretty instructive.

Because of leaky gut/immune problems, people might not absorb nutrients that are needed to create brain chemicals (among others), this contributes to problems that may variate among each individual. This means that people need supplementation with vitamins, minerals, anti-inflammatory fatty acids, and amino acids. According to each neurotransmitter imbalances, people might need more of specific amino acids. In the Mood Cure, we'll find the concept of food allergies and an elimination diet again in order to deal with brain chemical imbalances. It is really a key concept in order to heal. Identifying problematic/allergenic foods helps to stabilize your immune system and heal, thus enhancing your brain potential.

The blood type is a guide, but I think that an elimination diet is the safest way to make sure if one tolerates a food or not. Other enhacing memory concepts are included in the Ultra Mind Solution, where memory problems are treated with acetylcholine boosting supplements, including choline supplements. Here is a related article:

_http://www.vrp.com/articles.aspx?ProdID=2200


CDP Choline
Powerful Cognitive-Enhancing Nutrient
By Alexander G. Schauss, PhD, FACN
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CDP Choline (cytidine-5’-diphosphocholine, or citicoline) is a unique form of the essential nutrient choline that helps regulate bioelectrical activities in the brain. Over the last thirty years, CDP Choline has been studied in numerous animal and human clinical trials for its potential to enhance brain and cognitive function in a variety of clinical situations including memory loss, dementia, stroke, and head trauma. CDP Choline has achieved promising results in older individuals with inefficient memory, cognitive deficits, and early-stage Alzheimer’s. Therefore, it is worthwhile to discuss the many facets of CDP Choline’s role in cognition.

Aging and Memory

Difficulties with attention, learning, and recall are considered typical for most people in middle age and older. Starting around age fifty, we tend to experience brain changes that directly affect memory and cognitive function. It is now known that as we age there are decreases in the number of synapses between neurons and in the number and functionality of receptors (where chemical messengers are received on neurons). It is also known that, with aging, the availability of certain brain neurotransmitters is diminished, and that proper functioning of the bundles of neuronal fibers that transmit messages (white matter pathways) is impaired. All of these age-associated brain changes hinder communication between neurons and ultimately decrease our ability to pay attention, learn, and remember.

However, even in the face of these brain changes, successful aging without disruptive cognitive decline is definitely possible. Even centenarians may not exhibit memory problems despite the fact that their brains might show the hallmark features of degenerative brain disease, or Alzheimer’s, on autopsy. Genetics, environment, and lifestyle all play roles in determining why some people in their nineties are nearly as sharp as they have always been while others begin to deteriorate in their fifties.

The Role of CDP Choline

Studies have shown that supplementation with CDP Choline may be one way to modify this disruptive process of age-related cognitive decline. Produced naturally inside the body, CDP Choline is a compound used to synthesize phospholipids, the essential building blocks of all biological membrane systems. Phosphatidylcholine, one of the primary phospholipids synthesized by CDP Choline, is an integral component of cellular membranes that adds strength and fluidity to cells. Phosphatidylcholine in brain cell membranes decreases with age. Studies indicate that CDP Choline supplementation may increase phosphatidylcholine synthesis and might reverse this age-related loss.1

CDP Choline (citicoline) is synthesized and marketed in the US as a dietary supplement, and as a drug in Japan. In Europe, citicoline is approved and sold as a drug. It is frequently prescribed for cognitive impairment in several European countries, as well as for stroke and head trauma recovery, and other neurological disorders.

In addition to its role in producing phosphatidylcholine, citicoline may also serve as a choline donor for the synthesis of acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter that plays an important role in both learning and memory. Animal studies have indicated that it may increase dopamine and enhance the amount of bioactive reduced glutathione levels as well. Glutathione is a potent antioxidant, especially in the brain, while dopamine, a neurotransmitter, is essential for the healthy functioning of the central nervous system; it has effects on emotion, perception and movement. When taken as a supplement (or drug), citicoline appears to help preserve the structure and function of neuron membranes and possibly decrease the progression of neuron cell damage that occurs, for example, after a stroke.

Several clinical studies demonstrate that citicoline can be used successfully in some patients with stroke, brain trauma, chronic cerebrovascular disorders, and vascular dementia, as well as for some elderly non-demented individuals with memory deficits.

CDP Choline and Cognition

Among the aging baby boom population, memory problems are some of the most feared age-related health issues. Experts continue to disagree on what, if any, relationship exists between age-related memory loss (which is not considered a disorder), and the two memory disorders, mild cognitive impairment and dementia. As it now stands, the official term for the normal memory problems associated with aging is “age-associated memory impairment.”

Further studies looking at the full benefits and efficacy of CDP Choline in improving memory loss in “healthy” older adults are still needed. The few studies that have looked specifically at this subset, however, have demonstrated improved memory performance among elderly adults taking CDP Choline.

Prevention of memory loss has become a growing area of research. Because of CDP Choline’s intermediary role in phosphatidylcholine synthesis, early researchers theorized that it could restore memory function by repairing age-related changes within the brain neuronal membrane. One of the earliest studies evaluating CDP Choline’s potential as a treatment for age-related memory loss was a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial involving 84 patients, mean age 72, with mild to moderate memory deficits but no other cognitive dysfunctions. Memory loss was assessed using the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE). After being administered 1,000 mg CDP Choline daily for six weeks, subjects were assessed with the Randt Memory Test for changes in immediate recall, delayed recall, and global memory efficiency. Global memory efficiency improved, primarily due to the subjects’ significantly improved ability to learn new information.2

A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial using 95 healthy volunteers, ages 50-85, tested CDP Choline’s effect on memory.3 Subjects were recruited from the clinical research center at MIT and were screened to have no dementia. The researchers noted that a few of the patients might have met the criteria for age-associated memory impairment (a decline in memory, especially in verbal memory, can be observed in normal elderly people as well as in elderly with mild cognitive impairments).

The study had two phases. In the first phase, all subjects took 1,000 mg citicoline or placebo per day for three months. A portion of the group with relatively poor memories was recruited for the second phase and given either a placebo or 2,000 mg citicoline per day for three months. After the first phase, improvement with citicoline occurred only in the people with poor memories, who showed gains in delayed recall and logical memory. At the end of the second phase, verbal memory clearly improved in the 2,000 mg group, suggesting that 2,000 mg daily may be a more effective dose for people with age-associated memory impairment. The researchers concluded that in subjects with relatively inefficient memory, citicoline facilitated memory acquisition and retention.

A third placebo-controlled clinical trial demonstrated that citicoline possesses memory-enhancing activity in free recall tests (but not in recognition tests) at doses ranging from 300-1,000 mg per day. Four weeks of citicoline supplementation significantly improved the ability of 24 elderly subjects with memory deficits to recall words and objects after viewing them for two seconds each. No significant improvement was observed, however, for recognition tasks in which patients had to recall previously viewed words and objects randomly mixed with non-viewed items.4

CDP Choline has gone through a number of clinical trials to assess its effectiveness in cognitive enhancement in subjects with dementia, including dementia of the Alzheimer’s type as well as vascular, or multi-infarct, dementia. For instance, a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial tested the efficacy of CDP Choline in improving symptoms in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s-type dementia. Thirty patients were administered 1,000 mg CDP Choline daily for twelve weeks. Using four different scales, researchers determined there were changes between the CDP Choline and placebo groups, but the changes were not statistically significant. Results were better in patients with more mild mental deterioration.5 In 20 patients with Alzheimer’s, a double-blind study found that spatial-temporal orientation also significantly improved, while Mini Mental State Examination scores showed statistically significant increases only in a patient subgroup with early-onset Alzheimer’s.6

To determine the overall clinical efficacy of CDP Choline for the symptoms of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral impairment in older patients with dementia or mild cognitive impairment, a large meta-analysis in 2005 examined the data from 14 double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical studies. The results indicated a positive and consistent effect of CDP Choline on memory and behavior, at least in the short to medium turn, since none of the studies available were assessing long-term efficacy. The authors found the evidence to be especially strong for the efficacy of CDP Choline in patients with cognitive impairments related to cerebral vascular disorders, such as the complications of stroke.7

Strokes

Reduced blood flow to the brain, as occurs during a stroke, causes the degradation of phosphatidylcholine to free fatty acids (particularly the inflammation-inducing arachadonic acid) and free radicals. CDP Choline enhances the re-synthesis of phospholipids, primarily phosphatidylcholine, of cell membranes. It has shown promise for reducing stroke-related injury by stabilizing cell membranes long enough to prevent large-scale brain cell damage after stroke. A review published in 2005 identified thirteen stroke clinical trials of CDP Choline since 1980 in Europe, Japan, and the US.8 Both European and Japanese trials found that CDP Choline significantly improved neurological function and helped speed motor and cognitive recovery. A multicenter double-blind, placebo-controlled study was conducted to evaluate possible clinical benefits of CDP Choline in patients with acute cerebral infarction and disturbances of consciousness. Patients were allocated randomly to either CDP Choline (1,000 mg per day i.v. once daily for 14 days) or with placebo (physiological saline). One hundred thirty-three patients received CDP Choline treatment, and 139 received placebo. The group given CDP Choline showed significant improvements in level of consciousness compared with the placebo-treated group. CDP Choline was found to be entirely safe.9

Other studies evaluating the effects of CDP Choline after strokes have resulted in different outcomes. In a recent U.S. clinical trial involving nearly 400 patients in 33 centers nationwide, patients were first given citicoline or a placebo within a few hours of their stroke, then for six weeks afterward, with a six-week, post-treatment follow-up period.10 Results for the entire group as a whole showed no statistically significant difference in five areas—including full recovery and mortality rates, neurological and cognitive function—between patients with stroke who were given citicoline, and those who were given a placebo. However, it was found effective in the subgroup of the subjects with moderate to severe strokes. The same group of researchers then conducted an even larger trial using 2,000 mg citicoline for six weeks following a stroke. Again, they found that citicoline was ineffective in improving the outcome of acute stroke patients.11 The review authors concluded that further studies are essential before making any conclusions on using CDP Choline after strokes.

Conclusion

CDP Choline is a form of the essential nutrient choline and a precursor of phosphatidylcholine and acetylcholine. Oral CDP Choline supplementation has been found to promote phospholipid biosynthesis, increase cerebral blood flow, inhibit cytotoxic (cell-destroying) free fatty acids and formation of diacylglycerol (a precursor to triglyceride formation), and promote healthy brain bioelectrical activity. In clinical studies, it has improved verbal memory functioning in older individuals with relatively inefficient memories and has been very well tolerated. The latest meta-analysis found no noticeable side effects evidenced in the fourteen various studies evaluated.7

Alexander G. Schauss, PhD, FACN,

Dr. Schauss is the Director of Natural and Medicinal Products Research, in Puyallup, Washington. He has previously held the rank of an Adjunct Research Professor of Botanical Medicine and Clinical Professor of Natural Products Research at the National College of Naturopathic Medicine in Portland, Oregon, as well as Associate Professor of Research at the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine and Health Sciences in Tempe, Arizona. Dr. Schauss has been a member of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) Advisory Council (AMPAC); and a reviewer of botanical standards and information monographs for the U.S. Pharmacopoeia Convention (USP). In 1985, Dr. Schauss was appointed by the US government to represent the United States as a voting member to the World Health Organization (WHO) Study Group on Health Promotion. He is the author or a co-author of more than 140 papers or works that have appeared in various scientific journals as well as books covering such topics as his discovery that Acai (Euterpe oleracea) contains the richest amount of antioxidants found in any food, and the problem of intra-abdominal obesity (the potbelly) in men. Dr. Schauss’ many accomplishments over a span of three decades were formally recognized when he received the Linus Pauling Lecture Award for contributions in the medical sciences in 2005 from the American College for the Advancement of Medicine.

References

1. Babb SM, Wald LL, Cohen BM, Villafuerte RA, Gruber SA, Yurgelun-Todd DA, Renshaw PF. Chronic citicoline increases phosphodiesters in the brains of healthy older subjects: an in vivo phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy study. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2002;161: 248-54.

2. Agnoli A, Bruno G, Fioravanti M, et al. Therapeutic approach to senile memory impairment: a double-blind clinical trial with CDP choline. In: Wurtman RJ, Corkin S, Growden JH, eds. Alzheimer’s Disease: Proceedings of the Fifth Meeting of the International Study Group on the Pharmacology of Memory Disorders Associated with Aging. Boston: Birkhauser. 1989: 649-654.

3. Spiers PA, Myers D, Hochanadel GS, Lieberman HR, Wurtman RJ. Citicoline improves verbal memory in aging. Arch Neurol. 1996; 53: 441-8.

4. Alvarez XA, Laredo M, Corzo D, Fernandez-Novoa L, Mouzo R, Perea JE, Daniele D, Cacabelos R. Citicoline improves memory performance in elderly subjects. Meth Find Exp clin Pharmacol. 1997;19: 201-210.

5. Alvarez XA, Mouzo R, Pichel V, Perez P, Laredo M, Fernandez-Novoa L, Corzo L, Zas R, Alcaraz M, Secades J J, Lozano R, Cacabelos R. Double-blind placebo-controlled study with citicoline in APOE genotyped Alzheimer’s disease patients. Effects on cognitive performance, brain bioelectrical activity and cerebral perfusion. Methods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol. 1999;21: 633-44.

6. Caamano J, Gomez MJ, Franco A, Cacabelos R. Effects of CDP-choline on cognition and cerebral hemodynamics in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Methods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol. 1994;16: 211-8.

7. Fioravanti M, Yanagi M. Cytidinediphosphocholine (CDP-choline) for cognitive and behavioural disturbances associated with chronic cerebral disorders in the elderly. 2005. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. CD000269.

8. Adibhatla RM, Hatcher JF. Cytidine 5’-diphosphocholine (CDP-choline) in stroke and other CNS disorders. Neurochem Res. 2005 Jan;30(1):15-23.

9. Tazaki Y, Sakai F, Otomo E, Kutsuzawa T, Kameyama M, Omae T, Fujishima M, Sakuma A. Treatment of acute cerebral infarction with a choline precursor in a multicenter double-blind placebo-controlled study. Stroke. 1988. 19: 211-6.

10. Clark WM, Williams BJ, Selzer KA, Zweifler RM, Sabounjian LA, Gammans RE. A randomized efficacy trial of citicoline in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Stroke. 1999;30: 2592-7.

11. Clark WM, Wechsler LR, Sabounjian LA, Schwiderski UE. A phase III randomized efficacy trial of 2000 mg citicoline in acute ischemic stroke patients. Neurology. 2001;57: 1595-1602.

Another one that may enhance acetylcholine is acetyl-l-carnitine. Here is a related article:

http://www.naturalnews.com/015553_acetyl-L-carnitine_Alzheimers_disease.html

How Acetyl-L-Carnitine prevents Alzheimer's disease and dementia while boosting brain function

Acetyl-L-carnitine may offer unprecedented hope for people suffering from Alzheimer's disease or the aftereffects of a stroke. The human brain is uniquely powerful and complex, but it is sometimes difficult for it to fully recover from damage. People who have been affected by stroke, traumatic brain damage or age-associated dementia know this all too well. Fortunately, research studies suggest that the vitamin-like nutrient L-carnitine may be able to slow down, or even reverse, brain deterioration. Plus, it may give people the ability to think clearer and remember things like, "Where did I put my keys?"

If you're worried about developing Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease or age-associated dementia, studies suggest that acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) may delay the onset of the disease, according to Prescription for Dietary Wellness by Phyllis A. Balch. Furthermore, if you've already been diagnosed with Alzheimer's, ALC can help slow down its progression and improve your mental functioning. In fact, experimental and clinical studies demonstrate that ALC may have a "significant capacity to slow, and even reverse, the effects of aging on the brain," writes Dr. Russell L. Blaylock in Health and Nutrition Secrets.

So, how exactly does ALC work? Mind Boosters author Dr. Ray Sahelia believes that Alzheimer's patients may benefit from ALC in three ways: It is able to travel through the blood-brain barrier, where it then helps form the brain chemical acetylcholine; it keeps mitochondria working efficiently by clearing them of toxic fatty-acid metabolites; and it helps regenerate neurons damaged by free radicals.

The results of numerous research studies support Dr. Sahelia's theory, including electron microscope analysis of the hippocampus region of the brain, which demonstrated ALC's ability to reverse the age-related deterioration of mitochondria. Furthermore, according to Professor Gary Null, autopsies show that people who had Alzheimer's experienced 25 to 40 percent less ALC transferase activity than people without Alzheimer's. In other words, perhaps the reason why ALC supplementation is so beneficial to Alzheimer's patients is because they are deficient in L-carnitine in the first place.

Of course, the benefits of ALC's ability to regenerate lost brain function extends far beyond Alzheimer's disease, making it a promising treatment for victims of stroke as well. If it is administered to stroke victims soon after the stroke occurs, ALC may actually reduce the level of brain damage caused by the interrupted blood flow, according to an Italian animal study reported in Dr. Russell L. Blaylock's Health and Nutrition Secrets. But even if it was not possible to give a patient ALC soon after the stroke first occurred, ALC supplementation may help the patient improve memory, task performance and cognition during his or her road to recovery.

Furthermore, ALC may even be able to help people with Down's Syndrome, even though it is a congenital disease, rather than an age- or trauma-related one. In one 90-day study, ALC supplementation improved both the visual memory and attention of test subjects with Down's Syndrome. Further research into this scope of ALC's benefits should be promising.

Can Acetyl-L-Carnitine boost brain function?
If ALC supplements can help normalize the mental activity of people with neurological damage or deterioration, can it boost the brainpower of anyone? Many experts have asked the same question.

In Mind Boosters, Dr. Sahelia writes: "Acetyl-L-carnitine is an antioxidant involved in energy utilization within cells. A dose of 500 mg in the morning before breakfast works within two to three hours to induce a pleasant visual and mental clarity." Similarly, Bottom Line Personnel's 2004 Bottom Line Yearbook reports that ALC can "jump-start" the brain, and Dr. Blaylock believes that ALC improves spatial learning, long-term memory and discriminatory learning.

Given the fact that the acetyl component of ALC is an important neurotransmitter and L-carnitine itself helps increase cell energy, it isn't illogical to believe that ALC may offer mental-boosting effects, but experts' opinions are not unanimous. For example, Textbook of Natural Medicine authors Joseph E. Pizzorno and Michael T. Murray report that ALC supplementation may only be beneficial to people who are actually deficient in L-carnitine, such as people with age-associated mental deterioration.

Because scientists do not know the long-term health effects of ALC in large doses, Dr. Elson Haas cautions, "This is basically safe and can be taken over an extended period, although it probably should be stopped for one week each month, until its long-term safety as a supplement is more clearly established." Based on the opinions of Dr. Haas and other experts, this may be a safe way to see if ALC works for you.

So, how much ALC should you take? According to the PDR for Nutritional Supplements, a typical dose is 500 milligrams to two grams, taken daily in two divided doses. If you currently suffer from age-associated mental impairment, such as poor memory, Professor Null recommends that you take one to two grams of ALC daily for no more than 90 days in order to see improvement without any possible long-term health risks. When taken in these controlled doses, ALC supplementation may prove helpful, especially if you are currently experiencing dementia or even just "brain fog." Vitamin guru Earl Mindell says, "[ALC supplements] will not make you an Einstein, but they can help you remember where you put your car keys."

The experts speak on acetyl-L-carnitine's brain-boosting and repairing abilities:

ALC and Alzheimer's / age-associated dementia
The results of using acetyl-carnitine to delay the progression of Alzheimer's disease have been outstanding.
Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine by Michael T Murray MD Joseph L Pizzorno ND, page 222

L-carnitine was able to reverse much of the damage inflicted to brain cells by free radicals, which is typical of the kind of damage seen in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.
Earl Mindell's Supplement Bible by Earl Mindell RPh PhD, page 86

Electron microscopic studies in the hippocampus region of the brain showed that acetyl-L-carnitine and lipoic acid reversed age-associated mitochondrial structural decay.
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 21

Another nutrient that can aid in the battle with Alzheimer's disease is acetyl-L-carnitine. This versatile nutrient is able to transport itself through the blood/brain barrier, and serves to stimulate and fortify the nerve cells within the brain.
Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 29

Acetyl-L-carnitine is an amino acid produced by every cell in the body and, according to European studies, appears to slow down the mental deterioration that accompanies Alzheimer's.
Secret Remedies by Earl Mindell RPh PhD, page 36

Acetyl-L-carnitine also may stave off the protein deposits that develop in the brains of early-stage Alzheimer's patients.
Bottom Line Yearbook 2004 by Bottom Line Personnel, page 17

L-carnitine is an amino acid produced by every cell in the body and, according to European studies, appears to slow down the mental deterioration that accompanies Alzheimer's.
Earl Mindells Secret Remedies by Earl Mindell RPh PhD, page 36

A great deal of research has been conducted over the last decade with L-acetylcarnitine (LAC) in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, senile depression, and age-related memory defects. LAC is a composed of acetic acid and L-carnitine bound together.
Textbook of Natural Medicine Volumes 1-2 by Joseph E Pizzorno and Michael T Murray, page 1074

A different form of carnitine known as acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) has been shown in studies to be valuable in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, senile depression, and memory loss associated with aging. ALC occurs naturally in the body.
Natural Physicians Healing Therapies by Mark Stengler ND, page 302

For Alzheimer's disease and brain effects, it appears that L-carnitine is, however, the most widely available, least expensive, and best studied form of carnitine.
Encyclopedia Nutritional Supplements by Michael T Murray ND, page 286 L-carnitine

Always be sure that the form being used is L-carnitine alone or bound to either acetic or propionic acid. For Alzheimer's disease and brain effects, it appears that Acetyl-L-carnitine (LAC) may provide the greatest benefit.
Textbook of Natural Medicine Volumes 1-2 by Joseph E Pizzorno and Michael T Murray, page 637

Other examples of pro-drugs are alpha-lipoic acid and acetyl-L-carnitine. Research shows it can augment the body's healing mechanisms, as well as prevent and improve symptoms and disease for a wide range of conditions, including diabetes, neuropathy (nerve damage), liver disease, hypertension, hearing loss, and nerve damage in the brain associated with conditions such as Parkinson's disease.
Ultra prevention by Mark Hyman MD and Mark Liponis MD, page 87

Those elderly subjects with the highest depression scores are usually the ones who benefit the most from acetyl-L-carnitine.
Textbook of Natural Medicine Volumes 1-2 by Joseph E Pizzorno and Michael T Murray, page 640

Results of this study showed that acetyl-L-carnitine may be effective in ameliorating receptor functionality in the aging rat brain due to its ability to preserve the receptor-mediated functional Ach release response.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 852

Acetyl-L-carnitine is unique in its ability to provide a number of important protective functions. It has been shown to reduce the amount of an age pigment in the brain called lipofuscin.
Health and Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 323

ALC has become one of the most studied compounds for its anti-aging effects, particularly with regard to degeneration of the brain and nervous system.
Prescription for Nutritional Healing by Phyllis A Balch CNC and James F Balch MD, page 46

Results of this double-blind, placebo-controlled study showed that acetyl-L-carnitine had significant positive effects on memory and cognitive performance tasks in elderly patients with cerebrovascular insufficiency.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 12

The second study published by the National Academy of Sciences showed that supplementation with acetyl-L-carnitine and lipoic acid resulted in improved memory in old rats.
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 1257

The nutrient acetyl-L-carnitine can help improve memory, says Alan Brauer, M.D., founder and director of the Total Care Medical Center in Palo Alto, California. Scientists theorize that it boosts energy production in the brain, improves function in the brain's glutamate receptors, which are responsible for learning, and may stop the formation of lipofucian, a kind of "age spot" of the neurons that can interfere with memory.
Alternative Cures by Bill Gottlieb, page 437

Studies indicate that acetyl-L-carnitine can slow neurological aging. As discussed earlier in this protocol, supplemental acetyl-L-carnitine and lipoic acid have been shown to reverse certain parameters of brain aging in rats.
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 21

In addition, acetyl-L-carnitine reduces the receptor loss associated with aging of the brain and significantly improves learning and memory in aged animals and humans.
Excitotoxins by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 25

Studies suggest that mental deterioration in Alzheimer's patients can be slowed by supplementation of iron, vitamins B6 and B12, coenzyme Q10, and acetyl-L-carnitine.
Woman's Encyclopedia Of Natural Healing by Dr Gary Null, page 32

Acetyl-L-carnitine has proven helpful toward restoring short-term memory in Alzheimer's disease, as we discussed in the previous chapter.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 93

Among some Alzheimer's researchers, interest is brewing in a natural substance called acetyl-L-carnitine, which resembles amino acids found in dairy foods, kidney beans, eggs, and red meats.
New Foods for Healing by Selene Yeager, page 568

Treatment with acetyl-L-carnitine slowed deterioration in Mini-mental Status and Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scales, and normalized high-energy phosphate levels in a study of 5 probable Alzheimer's patients and 21 controls.
Woman's Encyclopedia of Natural Healing by Dr Gary Null, page 36

ALC and stroke victims
Acetyl-L-carnitine has also been shown to regenerate nerves (Fernandez et al. 1997); provide protection against glutamate and ammonia-induced toxicity to the brain (Rao et al. 1999); and to reverse the effects of heart aging in animals (Paradies et al. 1999).
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 1001

Results of this study involving a canine model of global cerebral ischemia and reperfusion showed that the postischemic administration of acetyl-L-carnitine potentiated the normalization of brain energy metabolites and produced marked improvements in neurological outcome.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 11

Acetyl-L-carnitine administered to stroke patients brought improvements in memory, cognition, and task performance.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 93

ALC and Down's Syndrome
Results of this study showed significant improvement in visual memory and attention in Down's Syndrome patients relative to controls following treatment with acetyl-L-carnitine for 90 days.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 10

Can ALC boost anyone's brain power?
With L-carnitine, people have a resource that helps them fight fatigue and improve mental performance.
Natural Physician's Healing Therapies by Mark Stengler ND, page 303

The acetyl component of acetyl-L-carnitine provides for the formation of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine.
PDR for Nutritional Supplements by Sheldon Saul Hendle and David Rorvik, page 10

L-carnitine is a vitamin-like nutrient that is found in the heart, brain and skeletal muscles. Its primary job is to transport fatty acids across the cell wall to the mitochondria, the powerhouse of the cell, providing heart and skeletal cells with energy.
Earl Mindell's Supplement Bible by Earl Mindell RPh PhD, page 85

Acetyl-L-carnitine crosses the blood brain barrier and provides the brain with more energy.
Get Healthy Now by Gary Null, page 218

This study examined the effects of acetyl-L-carnitine on brain adenylate cyclase activity in rats. Results showed that the treatment enhanced receptor-stimulated AC response in the frontal cortex of rats of all ages.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 854

Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC), co-enzyme Q10 (CoQ10), and lipoic acid. When used properly, these nutrients enhance mental function.
Mind Boosters by Dr Ray Sahelia MD, page 127

Anything that increases brain energy production will reduce excitotoxicity. This includes alpha-lipoic acid, CoQ10, niacin amide, all of the B vitamins, acetyl-L-carnitine, and creatine monohydrate.
Health and Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 199

Results of this study showed that acetyl-L-carnitine administered at high levels can have positive effects on the release of amino acids as well as neurotransmitters such as dopamine and acetylcholine in the brain of rats.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 12

Acetyl-L-Carnitine is a derivative of the amino acid, carnitine. It helps with neurotransmitter metabolism, and is necessary for normal neuron and brain function.
Building Wellness with DMG by Roger V Kendall PhD, page 94

Acetyl-l-carnitine is a natural substance found in the body. It too can act as an antioxidant in the brain and protect the cell's energy factories, the mitochondria.
Graedons' Best Medicine by Joe Graedon & Dr Terasa Graedon, page 232

Acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR), also a naturally occurring substance, has shown clinical benefits when used to treat a variety of conditions. Like alpha-lipoic acid, ALCAR has a protective effect on brain neurons and the liver.
Ultra-Prevention by Mark Hyman MD and Mark Liponis MD, page 87

Acetyl-L-carnitine was shown to protect neurons from the detrimental effects of beta-amyloid in the cortex of rats (Virmani et al. 2001).
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 62

There are several additional nutrients that are involved in energy production within brain cells, including coenzyme Q10, acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC), and lipoic acid.
Mind Boosters by Dr Ray Sahelia MD, page 218

A massive body of published scientific research indicates that one can take steps to boost cognitive function today, while simultaneously reducing the risk of Alzheimer's disease, stroke, and other degenerative brain diseases by taking CoQ10, acetyl-L-carnitine, and ginkgo.
Disease Prevention and Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 32

Acetyl-L-Carnitine (ALC): This amino acid (protein building block) enhances brain energy, helping to improve mood and reduce the effects of age-associated memory impairment.
Alternative Medicine by Burton Goldberg, page 528

Acetyl-L-carnitine and alpha-lipoic acid in testing memory they found that both nutrients improved memory, but the combination of both was the most effective.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 167

Acetyl-L-carnitine can aid in the formation of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, which we know plays a vital role in memory.
Health and Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 323

So, how much ALC should you take?
Acetyl-L-carnitine is a powerful anti-aging nutrient that is beneficial for mild mental impairment; practitioners recommend 1,000 to 2,000 mg a day for up to ninety days.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 192

Results of this double-blind, placebo-controlled study found that treatment with 2 g of acetyl-L-carnitine per day for 24 weeks had beneficial short-term memory effects on patients with Alzheimer-type dementia.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 711

Several major studies have shown that daily supplementation with ALC significantly slows the progression of Alzheimer's disease, resulting in less deterioration in memory, attention and language, and spatial abilities.
Prescription for Nutritional Healing by Phyllis a Balch CNC and James F Balch MD, page 46

Results of this double-blind, placebo-controlled study showed that the administration of 2g per day of acetyl-L-carnitine for three months led to significant improvements in elderly patients suffering from mental impairment.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 854

Elderly patients receiving acetyl-L-carnitine at doses of 1,000 to 2,000 mg a day for up to ninety days found relief from mild mental impairments such as slow memory.
Power Aging by Gary Null, page 93

Results of this double-blind, placebo-controlled study indicated that the administration of 1500 mg per day of acetyl-L-carnitine to elderly patients with mild mental impairments proved to be beneficial against cognitive and emotional-affective mental impairment.
The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing by Gary Null PhD, page 706

There is a thread about acetyl-L-carnitine here: http://www.cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php?topic=15196.0
 
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