How
worried should drug companies be about supplements eating into their
monopoly profits? A lot—as this story will show. Please share it with
anyone you know who is suffering from Alzheimer’s or is worried about
it.
Of
course, just about everyone worries about Alzheimer’s. It currently
afflicts 5.2 million people in the US and is the seventh leading cause
of death. The cost of treating it is estimated at $148 billion.
Mary
Newport, MD, has been medical director of the neonatal intensive care
unit at Spring Hill Regional Hospital in Florida since it opened in
2003. About the same time the unit opened, her husband Steve, then 53,
began showing signs of progressive dementia, later diagnosed as
Alzheimer’s Disease. “Many days, often for several days in a row, he was
in a fog; couldn’t find a spoon or remember how to get water out of the
refrigerator,” she said.
They
started him on Alzheimer’s drugs—Aricept, Namenda, Exelon—but his
disease worsened steadily. (It should be noted that the latest research
shows that the various Alzheimer’s drugs, like Aricept, have proven
disappointing, with little real benefit and often distressing side
effects.) When Dr. Newport couldn’t get her husband into a drug trial
for a new Alzheimer’s medication, she started researching the mechanism
behind Alzheimer’s.
She
discovered that with Alzheimer’s disease, certain brain cells may have
difficulty utilizing glucose (made from the carbohydrates we eat), the
brain’s principal source of energy. Without fuel, these precious neurons
may begin to die. There is an alternative energy source for brain
cells—fats known as ketones. If deprived of carbohydrates, the body
produces ketones naturally.
But
this is the hard way to do it—who wants to cut carbohydrates out of the
diet completely? Another way to produce ketones is by consuming oils
that have medium-chain triglycerides. When MCT oil is digested, the
liver converts it into ketones. In the first few weeks of life, ketones
provide about 25 percent of the energy newborn babies need to survive.
Dr.
Newport learned that the ingredient in the drug trial which was showing
so much promise was simply MCT oil derived from coconut oil or palm
kernel oil, and that a dose of 20 grams (about 20 ml or 4 teaspoons) was
used to produce these results. When MCT oil is metabolized, the ketones
which the body creates may, according to the latest research, not only
protect against the incidence of Alzheimer’s, but may actually reverse
it. Moreover, this is also a potential treatment for Parkinson’s
disease, Huntington’s disease, multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease), drug-resistant
epilepsy, brittle type I diabetes, and type II (insulin-resistant)
diabetes.
So
Mr. Newport, not being able to get into the drug trial, started taking
the coconut oil twice a day. At this point, he could barely remember how
to draw a clock. Two weeks after adding coconut oil to his diet, his
drawing improved. After 37 days, Steve’s drawing gained even more
clarity. The oil seemed to “lift the fog,” and in the first sixty days,
Dr. Newport saw remarkable changes in him: every morning he was alert
and happy, talkative, making jokes. His gait was “still a little weird,”
but his tremor was no longer very noticeable. He was able to
concentrate on things that he wanted to do around the house and in the
yard and stay on task, whereas before coconut oil he was easily
distractible and rarely accomplished anything unless he was directly
supervised.
Over
the next year, the dementia continued to reverse itself: he is able to
run again, his reading comprehension has improved dramatically, and his
short-term memory is improving—he often brings up events that happened
days to weeks earlier and relays telephone conversations with accurate
detail. A recent MRI shows that the brain atrophy has been completely
halted.
Let’s
take a moment to consider what actually happened here. Synthetic
(patentable) Alzheimer’s drugs have failed. A drug company reluctantly
decides to put a non-patentable natural substance (medium-chain
triglycerides derived from coconut or palm) through an FDA trial. It
works. But, darn it, a smart doctor figures out that a natural food can
be substituted for the super-expensive drug. Not only that, the ketones
from natural coconut oil last in the body longer than the drug
version—eight hours instead of three hours. This is enough to make a
drug company start worrying about its future. What if this natural
health idea really catches on? Goodbye to monopoly profits!
Coconut
oil can be found in many health food stores and even some grocery
stores. One large chain sells a non-hydrogenated (no trans-fat) brand of
coconut oil in a one-liter size (nearly 32 ounces) for about $7. It can
be purchased in quantities as small as a pint and up to five gallons
online. It is important to use coconut oil that is non-hydrogenated and
contains no trans-fat. We would also strongly encourage the use of
virgin oil (chemicals used to extract non-virgin oil are potentially
dangerous, and better still, virgin organic, still quite reasonably
priced.)
For more information, see Dr. Newport’s website.
Sadly, you will not find any information on ketones, or the use of
coconut oil or MCT oil, on the Alzheimer’s Association website.
Coconut
oil is not the only natural product that has the potential to turn
Alzheimer’s around. We will cover some other ones, and drug industry
efforts to steal some of them, in a future issue.
See our follow up article: More on Natural Substances to Combat Alzheimer’s

Hi mates, good article and pleasant arguments commented at this place, I am actually enjoying by these.
ReplyDeleteAlso visit my page; diet shots
Thank you for your kind words. I am an avid user of coconut oil.
Delete