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“Medicine’s $604 Billion ‘Memory Miracle'” Stock teased by Casey Extraordinary Technology

Identifying the Alzheimer's pick hinted at by Alex Daley

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, February 24, 2014

The phrase “Alzheimer’s Disease” sets off an almost pavlovian response among investors … we all know that Alzheimer’s is probably the least-understood major disease, and affects a spectacularly huge number of people, and even those who don’t get beyond fifth grade math can do the calculations: more than five million Americans have the disease, and that number continues to rise, people are living longer and already a third of senior citizens who leave this mortal coil have Alzheimer’s or some other form of dementia at the end of their lives. That’s a LOT of potential patients.

And they have almost nowhere to turn — there are a few approved drugs that help some patients with some of the symptoms of Alzheimer’s, particularly memory loss, but they don’t do anything to cure, prevent or reverse the disease. That’s the golden ticket for pharmaceutical companies, but the search for cures has also burned many big pharma companies and sent quite a few little biotechs into death spirals — there’s still plenty of debate about exactly what causes Alzheimer’s, the trials are expensive, and many companies have spent millions of dollars (or hundreds of millions) only to find out that their compound had dangerous side effects, or was ineffective.

Some of the big pharma companies have effectively given up on the disease for now, but there are still a half dozen heavyweights pushing through clinical trials — mostly for BACE inhibitors, which are designed to stop the formation of amyloid plaque (the most likely cause of Alzheimer’s, according to many but certainly not all scientists). Other BACE inhibitors have failed, but hope springs eternal — and there are also, as Doc Gumshoe noted in a brief update a few months ago, more than 1,000 clinical trails going on in Alzheimer’s disease (that includes treatment protocols and devices as well as drugs, but there are a lot of drugs).

Which is a long way of saying that yes, Alzheimer’s is probably the largest underserved market in medicine. And has been for longer than Stock Gumshoe has been around (that’s seven years now). Every time any halfway appealing Alzheimer’s drug enters clinical trials, investors jump on the story … especially when it’s a smaller company (“Pure play” biotechs are always sexier because they offer more ridiculous upside — Merck (MRK), for example, has a Phase III drug in trials now that is generating some hope … but even an anticipated market of perhaps $5-10 billion for their drug by some analysts doesn’t have people lusting after the stock, given Merck’s $160 billion market cap and $44 billion in sales last year).

And the stock being teased as an Alzheimer’s pick today by Alex Daley at Casey Extraordinary Technology is, indeed, a relatively small company with an Alzheimer’s drug in clinical trials. And no, it’s not the tiny one that was teased several times in 2010 and 2011 (that was Anavex Life Sciences, AVXL, which was around $3 when first teased and is now down around 25 cents… their lead drug is now “Anavex Plus” and is a cocktail of their lead compound, Anavex 2-73, mixed with Pfizer’s Aricept (the current far-and-away leader in Alzheimer’s symptom-attacking drugs).

So what is it? Here’s the intro which provides the first couple of clues:

“We’ve just uncovered an amazing story about one man’s recovery from one of the world’s most dreaded… and expensive… diseases. His groundbreaking drug treatment could soon become widely available and dominate a $604 billion medical market.

“And in March 2014, the entire world will find out why. The payoff to you could be astronomical… with triple-digit gains possible in one day….

“It’s no wonder the National Institute on Aging calls this disease a ‘looming health epidemic.’

“And the few drugs on the market that treat this disease—approved more than a decade ago—only target the symptoms of this degenerative brain disease and not the underlying cause.

“Yet, even with their limited effectiveness, their combined sales last year topped $6 billion, according to BCC Research.

“Analysts estimate that a treatment that targets the cause of the disease itself could generate sales of $20 billion or more.

“As you probably know by now, the disease is Alzheimer’s.

“ABC News recently reported that it’s ‘…the only one of the top 10 causes of death in America that cannot be prevented, cured or even slowed down once it begins.’

“But that’s about to change…

“Because in March 2014, one little-known biotech will release its biggest clinical results yet on a groundbreaking new Alzheimer’s treatment that could forever change the course of this terrifying disease.

“It’s the first treatment ever to target the cause of Alzheimer’s… rather than just relieve the symptoms.”

And we get a glowing endorsement from one of the patients who was apparently in the clinical trial:

One Red Capsule Gives Walter His Memory… And Life… Back….

“Once a day he was given a red capsule—developed by this fledgling biotech—and within the first month, his memory started to return.

“He started to remember little things like where his favorite cup was.

“According to the investigator who’s overseeing the clinical trial, Walter’s improvement was simply ‘incredible.’

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“And over the next 14 months, he became a poster child for success in clinical trials.

“Walter and his wife were elated. Walter called the breakthrough treatment ‘a godsend,’ and his wife called it ‘amazing.'”

So there we have it — the promise from Alex Daley is that he has identified a stock which will report some kind of clinical data next month, and has shown progress in at least some patients, and it’s a smallish company which would presumably feel a strong impact from whatever the results of that clinical trial might be. Big potential market, large near-term catalyst — the kind of stuff that gets traders very excited … especially when you happen to be in the midst of a biotech bull market, as we are now (or a biotech bubble, if you want to be more cynical).

And just to make sure we dot the i’s and cross the t’s, let’s see what other details Daley provides for this secret pick:

“You Could Make Life-Changing Gains From This Breakthrough Alzheimer’s Discovery

“Deutsche Bank estimates the market for this company’s breakthrough Alzheimer’s treatment could be worth $20 billion annually.

“So we’re looking at a tiny biotech—$485 million market cap in early February—that’s set to dominate a $20 billion drug market with a one-of-a-kind, patented breakthrough treatment.

“Even if it only captured a small 20% of this enormous potential ($4 billion), this booming biotech’s possible projected value would be enormous. If the company traded at just 1x its annual sales—well below the typical industry multiples of 2.5x to more than 5x—its shares would trade at about $98.

“As I write you, the stock’s price is hovering around $11.28 per share; that’s a massive 769% potential gain from this tiny biotech that’s extremely undervalued at its current price.”

So who is it? Well, we did haul out the Mighty, Mighty Thinkolator on this one just to be certain of our match … but this is 99% sure to be Prana Biotechnology (PRAN), the current market darling small cap stock in Alzheimer’s. The company has been mentioned in reader comments a few times over the past year, including from some folks who likely enjoyed nice returns as it climbed dramatically last year (it was around $2 a year ago, climbed to $12 last month, and is now back down around $9).

Their basic science is being used to attack both Huntington’s Disease (the clinical trial is called the Reach2HD trial) and Alzheimer’s Disease (the IMAGINE trial). The Huntington’s results last month were apparently good (though there’s some debate), and investors are very eagerly awaiting the IMAGINE results that are expected to come out sometime in March. If I begin to talk about the science, I’ll instantly start to sound uninformed … so I’ll avoid that entirely and just say that this is not the same path that the BACE inhibitor drugs (like Merck’s, etc.) are treading, they’re instead essentially targeting metals in the brain as a cause of neurological disorders.

We have been hosting an incredibly long discussion thread on other biotech stocks that grew organically out of a prior teaser article, and in that thread Prana came up along with several other “hot topic” stocks in biotech — so you can see the comments of some of our more knowledgeable readers there, including from biocqr here, karmaswimswami here (Karma was responding to Frenchy’s question about Prana, here). I imagine all those folks probably know more about the stock than I do.

For outside thoughts on Prana, there’s been a huge surge of interest at SeekingAlpha with both strongly negative and positive opinions — which tends to happen with most biotechs or rapid growers. This piece and this piece recently caught my eye as being pretty well thought-out, though I don’t know if they’ll end up being correct. On the flip side, Adam Feurstein over at TheStreet has been generating piles of hate mail for himself by writing a series of negative or cautionary articles about Prana over the last week (one example here).

So yes, if Prana can cure Alzheimer’s they’ll become a multi-billion-dollar company. But there’s plenty of skepticism out there about whether that can happen or not, and I don’t know whether the FDA’s new guidelines that they’ll accept limited proof of efficacy will have any impact on the multi-year safety studies that would likely be required before approval… but there will be news next month that provides at least a little more ammunition for either the bulls or the bears (or maybe, given the Huntington’s results, both). I’m sure there are at least dozens of folks here who know far more about this stock than I do, so feel free to chime in and share your thoughts with a comment below.

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 3:20 pm

In the eighties it was aluminum. Yep, Alzheimer’s was from all that Diet Coke drunk from cans. A few years later, copper. And then iron.

Before all of this falderal is over, science will have fingered titanium, tin and antimony. Arsenic, molybdenum and vanadium.

Metals hang around as prosthetic groups in damaged proteins when tissues get injured. They are rarely the cause of the injury. If you break a leg, you get bruises. But you cannot help the leg heal by using an agent that makes the bruises go away.

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Rosenmeyer
Rosenmeyer
February 24, 2014 3:24 pm

net net PRAN is garbage imo-one of only 2 bios I am currently short-TNXP the other one

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 3:34 pm

Miller: TNXP is complete and utter garbage. Good on you for shorting it. I have rarely seen more audacious merchants of hubristical nonsense than Tonix. They take investors for fools and will themselves be had. Cyclobenzaprine is a rotten drug and cannot be reinvented for anything useful for anybody. That they think they will reformulate it, charge 10 times more, and succeed is just delusional.

Elliot Sedlecky
Guest
Elliot Sedlecky
February 25, 2014 8:34 am
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Thanks for the thoughts on TNXP. I am long and up about 75% since buying in. Due to your thoughts, I am going to sell half today. With the other half, I would like to ride the hype as I believe it is likely not over. Any thoughts on how I might best place a stop? Currently thinking I’ll place a trailing stop of 14%.

Michael Cromarty
Member
Michael Cromarty
August 21, 2020 10:30 am

How did that turn out for you?

bronx54
Member
bronx54
March 1, 2014 3:39 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

How do I see your early post..I am new to GS….Wanted to read your early post
on Bio techs. I am 79 and a little slow getting on to this.
Thank you

tompaol
Member
February 24, 2014 3:49 pm

Wall Street Daily was touting this last week as well. Its up $1.00 today. 18% The question is is it worth the risk?

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modernrock
Irregular
February 24, 2014 6:54 pm
Reply to  tompaol

can’t find it on their website and don’t recall seeing it in any of their pieces. must have missed it. Seeking Alpha had an article out Friday with an $800 target, yes $800 on approval. Most likely the big gap and run, not this tease.

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tompaol
Member
February 24, 2014 3:49 pm

Sorry that is 12.83 % not 18%

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Goodwin
Member
Goodwin
February 24, 2014 4:19 pm

I’ve just read the alternative medicine’s HSI Health Sciences Institute on Alz, Canc, Diab, et al which slams the pharmacies and the FDA for promoting their “poisons ” when there are far better proven alternatives without the dreaded side affects available. Does anyone out there have any experience of the HSI recommendations ?

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 5:55 pm
Reply to  Goodwin

I recommend avoiding HSI. Pseudoscience.

dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 6:01 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

That is the issue. There are crooks on all sides of the problem making the solution hard to find. I am not disagreeing with your comment about HSI but all these people that did studies on dairy products, soy products and wheat being literally poison for your body are true. Getting the public to accept it when Marijuana is illegal but ALLEVE is over the counter is insane.

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jer_vic
jer_vic
February 25, 2014 1:10 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

“By definition”, I begin
“Alternative Medicine”, I continue
“Has either not been proved to work,
Or been proved not to work.
You know what they call alternative medicine
That’s been proved to work?
Medicine.”
—Tim Minchin

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lookinforvalue
lookinforvalue
February 24, 2014 4:55 pm

did no read HSI data however Dr. Newport from Tampa Fl. has written a book “what if there was a cure for Alzheimer’s and no one knew?” Calls Alz diabetes of the brain because the brain thrives on cholesterol and statin drugs for one reduce Ch. Also lo fat diet. Switch to Coconut Oil for cooking and take a tlbs a day out of the jar. Visit her website (google it) for her story of her husband who had no life and now he does. Coconut oil is a fatty acid found in mothers milk and coconuts.

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Fred Di Francesco
Member
Fred Di Francesco
March 3, 2014 4:39 am
Reply to  lookinforvalue

The doctor to whom you refer is Dr. Mary Newport; I’ve read her amazing story, as part of my own look into Coconut Oil. There are lots of links to her; here’s one:
http://tv.greenmedinfo.com/man-dramatically-reverses-alzheimers-symptoms-with-coconut-oil/
My doctor wanted to put me on statins; I told him: NO WAY, started researching alternative ways to deal with cholesterol, and ran into Coconut Oil. I’ve read several studies done on the populations that eat a diet rich in Coconut Oil, primarily the Polynesians. They find no evidence of obesity, heart or vascular complications linked to Coconut Oil. The misunderstanding comes from the fact that Coconut Oil is high in–like 90%–saturated fat. The distinction is that the saturated fat in Coconut Oil is naturally occurring saturated fat. While the artificially manipulated saturated fats, are created by the process of hydrogenation. It is these hydrogenated fats, long-chain triglycerides, known as Trans Fats, which compromise your liver and pancreas, and are stored as fat, that have been linked with cholesterol, vascular and heart troubles. There is NO evidence to suggest that the naturally occurring saturated fats are a problem. Quite the reverse is true; their Medium-chain triglycerides translate to energy, and stimulate your immune system. I understand that babies with digestive problems, unable to eat, are given Coconut Oil in their formula. Also patients of all ages with digestive problems, do well on such naturally occurring saturated fats.

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Lane Simonian
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Lane Simonian
February 24, 2014 5:37 pm

The results of Prana’s phase two clinical trial for Huntington’s disease was somewhat lackluster. At a high dose, Prana’s PBT2 produced a slight, but significant improvement in executive function in early stage Huntington’s patient. It did not produce any other improvements. PBT2 may accomplish something similar for early stage Alzheimer’s patients (we will know more when the company releases its results in March).

The primary cause of Alzheimer’s disease is a toxic oxidant called peroxynitrite. Peroxynitrites inhibit the synthesis and release of neurotransmitters involved in short-term memory, sleep, mood, alertness, and social recognition, reduce the flow of blood and the transport of glucose in the brain which contributes to apathy, wandering, and delusions, prevent the regeneration of neurons in the hippocampus, and lead to the death of neurons.

The main early route to peroxynitrite formation is via tyrosine receptor kinases and/or g protein activation and takes places mainly in lipid rafts composed of low density lipids (“bad cholesterol”) and saturated fats. Peroxynitrites and hydrogen peroxide stimulate BACE1 activity which produces the first cut in the amyloid precursor protein. The second cut is via the release of intracellular calcium which also involves tyrosine receptor kinases and/or g protein activation. Polyphenolic compounds inhibit tyrosine receptor kinases and omega 3-fatty acids alter lipid rafts and the two together (in a Mediterranean diet, for instance) will in many cases prevent or delay the onset of Alzheimer’s disease.

Amyloid oligomers by attracting copper and zinc increase the conversion of superoxide anions (which also combine with inducible nitric oxide to form peroxynitrites) into hydrogen peroxide. When peroxynitrites are scavenged they form water and a nitrite anion and when the nitrite anion combines with hydrogen peroxide it forms water and peroxynitrites again. PBT2 by chelating out some of the copper and zinc slows down the production of peroxynitrites early in Alzheimer’s disease (and in Huntington’s disease) but does not stop this production. Thus, results showing slight improvements in one are of cognitive function in early stage patients is about what one would expect.

As oligomers aggregate into plaques, copper and zinc are entombed and hydrogen peroxide production declines. The main route to peroxynitrite formation at this point is via the nitration of NMDA receptors.

Peroxynitrite scavengers have repeatedly partially ameliorated Alzheimer’s disease in animal models, human clinical trials, and case studies from the earliest stages to the latest stages of Alzheimer’s disease. The best of them such as eugenol in rosemary essential oil (see Jimbo study with aromatherapy) and heat-processed ginseng (ferulic acid, syrinigic acid, and vanillic acid–see Heo’s study) have led to significant improvements in cognition in Alzheimer’s patients (and in behavior in studies using ferulic acid).

Targeting BACE1, amyloid oligomers, or metals such as copper and zinc will only slow down the progression of Alzheimer’s disease early on whereas peroxynitrite scavengers have the potential to treat the disease at any stage.

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 6:10 pm
Reply to  Lane Simonian

Lane: Thanks for posting, but I cannot agree with all of that. There is no evidence of omega-3 benefit in Alzheimer RCTs. There is no consensus whatsoever on what a Mediterranean diet is. There is no evidence that polyphenols benefit Alzheimer patients. The peroxynitrite notion is a hypothesis from the late 90’s that literally appeared in “Medical Hypotheses,” a journal, and there is little to support any idea that this had advanced since the 90’s with the exception of autopsy studies. If this hypothesis were correct, Wilson disease patients would all get Alzheimer disease prematurely and they never do. There is no quality clinical data of benefit from eugenol, rosemary, or ginseng.

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Lane Simonian
Guest
Lane Simonian
February 24, 2014 11:22 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

To respond thoroughly to all of your points would take a book. I will try to be as efficient as possible.

Omega-3 fatty acids and polyphenols inhibit the production of peroxynitrites and this is likely why they may reduce the risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

Neurobiol Aging. 2005 Dec;26 Suppl 1:133-6. Epub 2005 Nov 2.
Prevention of Alzheimer’s disease: Omega-3 fatty acid and phenolic anti-oxidant interventions.
Cole GM1, Lim GP, Yang F, Teter B, Begum A, Ma Q, Harris-White ME, Frautschy SA.

Safety concerns with chronic NSAIDs led to a screen of alternative NSAIDs and identification of the phenolic anti-inflammatory/anti-oxidant compound curcumin, the yellow pigment in turmeric that we found targeted multiple AD pathogenic cascades. The dietary omega-3 fatty acid, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), also limited amyloid, oxidative damage and synaptic and cognitive deficits in a transgenic mouse model. Both DHA and curcumin have favorable safety profiles, epidemiology and efficacy, and may exert general anti-aging benefits (anti-cancer and cardioprotective.).

Vegetables, fruits, and spice polyphenols found in a Mediterranean diet may extend the life of people with Alzheimer’s disease by almost four years most likely because polyphenols scavenge peroxynitrites.

Mediterranean diet and Alzheimer disease mortality
Nikolaos Scarmeas, MD, Jose A. Luchsinger, MD, Richard Mayeux, MD and Yaakov Stern, PhD

In adjusted models, as compared with AD patients at the lowest MeDi adherence tertile, those at the middle tertile had lower mortality risk (0.65; 0.38 to 1.09; 1.33 years’ longer survival), whereas subjects at the highest tertile had an even lower risk (0.27; 0.10 to 0.69; 3.91 years’ longer survival; p for trend = 0.003).

Conclusion: Adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MeDi) may affect not only risk for Alzheimer disease (AD) but also subsequent disease course: Higher adherence to the MeDi is associated with lower mortality in AD. The gradual reduction in mortality risk for higher MeDi adherence tertiles suggests a possible dose-response effect.

The peroxynitrite hypothesis for Alzheimer’s disease was first proposed in the 1990s, but there has been substantial additional support for this hypothesis since then. I will just cite what may be the most important finding.

FASEB J. 2006 Jul;20(9):1431-42.
Peroxynitrite induces Alzheimer-like tau modifications and accumulation in rat brain and its underlying mechanisms.
Zhang YJ1, Xu YF, Liu YH, Yin J, Li HL, Wang Q, Wang JZ.

These results provide the first in vivo evidence showing that peroxynitrite simultaneously induces tau hyperphosphorylation, nitration, and accumulation, and that activation of GSK-3beta, p38alpha, p38beta, p38delta isoforms and the inhibition of proteasome activity are respectively responsible for the peroxynitrite-induced tau hyperphosphorylation and accumulation. Our findings reveal a common upstream stimulator and a potential therapeutic target for Alzheimer-like neurodegeneration.

We can disagree as to whether it is high quality evidence, but here is some of the evidence that eugenol, ferulic acid, and other peroxynitrite scavengers ameliorate Alzheimer’s disease.

Effects of Eugenol on the Central Nervous System: Its Possible Application to Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease, Depression, and Parkinson’s Disease
Author: Irie, Yoshifumi

Eugenol inhibits Aβ-induced excessive influx of calcium ion into neurons that causes neuronal death.

Psychogeriatrics. 2009 Dec;9(4):173-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1479-8301.2009.00299.x.
Effect of aromatherapy on patients with Alzheimer’s disease.
Jimbo D1, Kimura Y, Taniguchi M, Inoue M, Urakami K.

Results: All patients showed significant improvement in personal orientation related to cognitive function on both the GBSS-J and TDAS after therapy. In particular, patients with AD showed significant improvement in total TDAS scores. Result of routine laboratory tests showed no significant changes, suggesting that there were no side-effects associated with the use of aromatherapy. Results from Zarit’s score showed no significant changes, suggesting that caregivers had no effect on the improved patient scores seen in the other tests.
CONCLUSIONS:
In conclusion, we found aromatherapy an efficacious non-pharmacological therapy for dementia. Aromatherapy may have some potential for improving cognitive function, especially in AD patients.

J Med Food. 2009 Feb;12(1):124-30. doi: 10.1089/jmf.2007.0646.
Evaluation of the peroxynitrite scavenging activity of heat-processed ginseng.
Kang KS1, Tanaka T, Cho EJ, Yokozawa T.
Author information
Abstract
To ascertain the principal active peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) scavenging components of heat-processed Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer (sun ginseng [SG]), the ONOO(-) scavenging activities of fractions and components of SG were compared. The results demonstrated that the ONOO(-) scavenging ability of SG was due to its ether fraction containing phenolic compounds. High-performance liquid chromatography analysis and ONOO(-) scavenging activity tests of the phenolic acids contained in SG identified vanillic acid, ferulic acid, p-coumaric acid, syringic acid, and maltol as the main active ONOO(-) scavenging components of SG. The ONOO(-) scavenging activities of phenolic acids and maltol were dependent on the degrees of their proton donating ability.

Nutr Neurosci. 2012 Jul 9. [Epub ahead of print]
Heat-processed ginseng enhances the cognitive function in patients with moderately severe Alzheimer’s disease.
Heo JH, Lee ST, Chu K, Oh MJ, Park HJ, Shim JY, Kim M.

Results: The treatment groups showed significant improvement on the MMSE and ADAS. Patients with higher dose group (4.5 g/day) showed improvements in ADAS cognitive, ADAS non-cognitive, and MMSE score as early as at 12 weeks, which sustained for 24-week follow-up.
DISCUSSION:
These results demonstrate the potential efficacy of a heat-processed form of ginseng on cognitive function and behavioral symptoms in patients with moderately severe AD.

Peroxynitrites are implicated in many different diseases, many of which are independent of each other depending on how, where, and how many peroxynitrites form.

Separate from this, the current and proposed treatments for Alzheimer’s disease fail because they either treat a symptom rather than a cause of Alzheimer’s disease (acetylcholinesterase inhibitors), because they reduce a contributor rather than the prinicipal routes to the disease (anti-amyloid drugs or metal chelators such as PBT2), or they don’t effectively treat a main route in the disease (Namenda). Start looking at peroxynitrites as the principal cause of the disease and certain natural antioxidants as a treatment for the disease and some major progress will likely be made against the disease.

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Nikki
Guest
Nikki
February 25, 2014 1:29 pm
Reply to  Lane Simonian

Lane, thank you so much for this great information – from both an investor’s perspective but especially for those of us interested in non-pharmaceutical answers to devastating diseases such as this. Do you know if the general public has access to the substances you mention? That form of ginseng, especially? Again, thanks for taking the time to provide such excellent explanations and info.

Lane Simonian
Guest
Lane Simonian
February 25, 2014 2:15 pm
Reply to  Nikki

There is a supplier for sun ginseng (heat-processed ginseng) operating out of Los Angeles, California (the exporter is Ginseng Science; the importer is Sun Sam, incorporated). The cost for a month supply (based on the dose used in the clinical trial) is about $700 a month. Sun ginseng is produced via a patented process of alternating between steam heating and drying of Panax ginseng. At a high dose, red ginseng which is produced by steaming led to some improvements in cognition in Alzheimer’s patients which were maintained over a nearly two year period, but the results with sun ginseng were better. The additional steaming and dry heating appears to increase the concentrations of the methoxyphenols compounds that scavenge peroxynitrites.

Improvement of Cognitive Deficit in Alzheimer’s Disease Patients by Long Term Treatment with Korean Red Ginseng [a species of Panax ginseng]

A 24-week randomized open-label study with Korean red ginseng (KRG) showed cognitive benefits in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. To further determine long-term effect of KRG, the subjects were recruited to be followed up to 2 yr. Cognitive function was evaluated every 12 wk using the Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS) and the Korean version of the Mini Mental Status Examination (K-MMSE) with the maintaining dose of 4.5 g or 9.0 g KRG per d. At 24 wk, there had been a significant improvement in KRG-treated groups. In the long-term evaluation of the efficacy of KRG after 24 wk, the improved MMSE score remained without significant decline at the 48th and 96th wk. ADAS-cog showed similar findings. Maximum improvement was found around week 24. In conclusion, the effect of KRG on cognitive functions was sustained for 2 yr follow-up, indicating feasible efficacies of long-term follow-up for Alzheimer’s disease.

I don’t know how close one could come to duplicating the process of repeat steaming and dry heating of ginseng. In terms of the larger picture, what you need are highly concentrated peroxynitrite scavengers that reach the brain in large enough concentrations to make a difference–aromatherapy with compounds high in eugenol (combined with stress reducing essential oils containing linalool when anxiety becomes a problem) and heat-processed ginseng fit this bill–that is why the trials run by Jimbo and Heo are one of the few ever to stop the progression of Alzheimer’s disease and partially reverse it.

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claresa
Guest
claresa
March 2, 2014 11:19 am
Reply to  Lane Simonian

lane, wow, thank you so much ! i use the paleo diet and i’ts keeping me away from the doorstep of lots of troublesome stuff like: diabetes ! i first found out how important this stuff was and options of prevention, around five years ago, when seeking solutions to problems that led to the gaps diet ! these dietary solutions have been nothing less than life saving !

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pathman1
pathman1
February 24, 2014 6:24 pm
Reply to  Lane Simonian

Lane: Excellent piece! Thanks for taking the time to put this together.

Lane Simonian
Guest
Lane Simonian
February 24, 2014 11:24 pm
Reply to  pathman1

Thank you very much. I once was wisely told that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I look almost every day for the best evidence available.

James Teck
Member
March 2, 2014 5:05 pm
Reply to  Lane Simonian

Could you comment on the potential of peroxynitrite scavengers to treat Parkinson’s?

Lane Simonian
Guest
Lane Simonian
March 2, 2014 9:44 pm
Reply to  James Teck

The footprints of peroxynitrites are all over Parkinson’s disease as well. Some studies suggest peroxynitrite scavengers such as minocycline and uric acid can be of some benefit in the treatment of Parkinson’s. There are probably better alternatives in the forms of various natural antioxidants, but the human studies don’t seem to be there yet. Here is a good review article, however.

Review
Recent Advances on the Neuroprotective Potential of
Antioxidants in Experimental Models of Parkinson’s Disease
Sushruta Koppula, Hemant Kumar, Sandeep Vasant More, Byung Wook Kim, In Su Kim
and Dong Kug Choi *

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dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 5:55 pm

I am the furthest thing from a knowledgeable western medicine person but with all the resent news regarding the very clear and proven dangers of eating WHEAT and evidence that has shown that many of the food preparations we eat are the direct cause for these illnesses.
Knowing and seeing this first hand I simply do not believe these are true cures YET they may do enough to make billions.
If Rockefeller and Carnegie did not create Allopathic medicine the US would be a much different place where Homeopaths and Osteopaths and Chiropractors would be the medical profession and we would rarely require them because we would eat proper diets.
The reason people eat so much is simple. It takes a lot of crap to try and get what is truly worthwhile in it.
Search for David Perlmutters articles about the dangers of eating Wheat and how it is indigestible for the human body. I believe it is the cause of so many men getting Prostate Cancer. They have created testing methods that simply don’t work well. If you research the testing of drugs people take every day you will find many of them have just small difference between people getting well from sugar pills believing they are medicine.
Point, the most valuable part of getting someone well is remove all stress. Our system is specifically designed to be as stressful as possible, For me this is no accident.
Sorry if this is not relevant but I cannot personally buy something I do not believe it whether it makes money or not.
Doug

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Chris
Guest
Chris
February 24, 2014 5:56 pm

Hopefully something work,s who gives a crap how much money is made. That`s Evil!!

dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 5:58 pm

Sorry but here is a link that shows info specific to Alzheimer using all Natural methods. Such as not eating poisons.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2013/09/29/dr-perlmutter-gluten.aspx

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 6:12 pm
Reply to  dcohn

Anything by Mercola should be held between thumb and forefinger at arm’s length. And use your other hand to pinch your nose shut. One of the most execrable scoundrels and snake oil merchants ever to visit himself on naive people.

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dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 8:33 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

I used to believe that as well but after seeing all the good he has to say and do I have since changed my opinion. I will not attempt to sway anyone elses opinion and apologize if I took the comments off track in anyway. the medical establishment kills 783,936 people in the United States every year
http://www.naturalnews.com/036599_gun_control_prescription_drugs_deaths.html##ixzz2uIEsMw5i
I would like to add that if Mercola is a snake oil salesman what is a plastic surgeon? A respected part of society? How on earth did it turn out like that I simply do not understand.
More people die from prescription medication than ALL illegal drugs combined.
This relates to buying stocks since you should buy what you believe in and not anything that can lead to harm people, animals etc. Crazy ideas I have I guess…..
My opinion only and I will not add any more unrelated comments!

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Nikki
Guest
Nikki
February 25, 2014 1:34 pm
Reply to  dcohn

Hear, hear!! Totally agree with you, Douglas.

Anon. viewer of www,stopthecrime.net
Member
Anon. viewer of www,stopthecrime.net
February 25, 2014 9:52 pm
Reply to  dcohn

In total agreement. Anyone seeking to live in peace and harmony with less stress in accordance with the laws of nature should seek to invest in areas that do much more benefit than harm. In investments I try to follow the biblical injunction not to harm the earth, the seas or trees. I prefer natural supplements and herbs in resonance with my own personal energetic system to synthetic drugs whenever possible. Less karmic backlash helps me sleep better. With the increase in toxins in the environment and our food and water, depletion of oxygen levels in our air and nutrients in our food and sensory overload in the information age, healthy lifestyle choices regarding nutrition, exercise and spiritual renewal and connection become increasing essential to fitness and survival. What I find most disturbing is the deliberate and cavalier introduction of toxic metals such as uranium into the environment, the teratogenic effects of which will be most horrifyingly multiplied through successive future generations across multiple species. The mismanagement of the meltdown at Fukushima ensures its spread throughout the oceans, adding to the death and deformity of untold millions of unborn children and other life forms from depleted uranium carried by wind and sea, not to mention all the ill-contained nuclear waste from nuclear power plants leaking into water systems globally. Such dangers of the atomic age have appalled us since the days of Nader’s Raiders and are no less prevalent today. We have become numbed and distracted by the media while our Bill of Rights and constitutional guarantees are being eroded by the criminal stealth of a privileged few.

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bronx54
Member
bronx54
March 1, 2014 3:43 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

How do you get to read your eariler post. I am new to GS and
79 and a little slow in getting on to this.
I would love to read your comments on other Bio techs.
and what you like and don’t like.

Thank you

dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 6:06 pm

And if you all do not want me to go away here is one link that may enlighten your further regarding other diseases created by our insane policies IE what cane be used on our food when growing creates poison. See John’s great article below.

http://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/02/24/email-from-author-of-study-on-roundupgluten-intolerance/

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Sam
Member
Sam
February 24, 2014 6:50 pm

karmaswimswami,

What about SGMO? Their Phase-2 data is coming in 2015.

Also what about a penny stock from Canada AVXL?

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karmaswimswami
February 24, 2014 6:57 pm
Reply to  Sam

Sam: Let me look into Anavex. The sigma receptor stuff is newish science. They are not well capitalized and still almost all pre-clinical. With Sangamo are you referring to the Zn-finger program for HIV?

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Sam
Member
Sam
February 24, 2014 8:14 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Thanks a lot Dr. karmaswimswami.

I am referring to their “Alzheimer’s Disease – CERE-110.

Looking forward to Your Response.

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abxyz0101
February 24, 2014 6:53 pm

I am impressed by fact that there was a 95% retention rate in study and only one report of adverse reaction which was worsening of one patient after discontinuation of the drug. There are no sure fire bets in stock market for a commoner like me. I have taken a small speculative position. Wall street is a casino believe it or not. Rising market creates armies of geniuses; falling market of fools you wouldn’t know as they become invisible.

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techscan
Irregular
techscan
February 24, 2014 6:58 pm

I hate it that I have to post a banal comment in order to get notified of new postings!

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Meg in Minneapolis
February 24, 2014 7:46 pm

My mother had Alzheimer’s, so I am motivated to try to avoid it. To date, I am aware of no efficacious drug. So I look to “alternative medicine.”

Studies conducted by the University of Chicago are compelling. Their studies began in the 1930’s, when they sent graduate students to two towns in Texas. One town has a very high crime rate. Students soon recognized that this town also has a high rate of Alzheimer’s Disease, Parkinson’s Disease, ALS, rheumatoid arthritis, obesity, and anorexia. All of these conditions are rare in the town right next to it. Students worked for decades to explain differences between these two towns.

In the 1990’s, a graduate student tested the water, revealing a higher than normal amount of lithium in the low crime town (and a lower amount of lithium in the high crime town…the one with high incidence of Alzheimer’s Disease).

After those findings were published, I began taking Lithium aspartate. On the day I took the first tiny pill, my hands were gnarled from arthritis. Today, I am aware of not one single indication of arthritis. I attribute this huge improvement in my life to Lithium. And I am relying on Lithium being my effective anti-Alzheimer’s insurance policy, too.

Many supplements benefit brain health. Vinpocetine and PQQ quickly sharpen mental focus. Vitamin K and Vitamin D both dissolve plaque that can cause brain fog. Coenzyme Q10 in the form Ubiquinol is associated with mental acuity into old age. I appreciate such benefits…but for avoidance of Alzheimer’s, I especially rely on Lithium.

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dcohn
Member
February 24, 2014 8:11 pm

I fully believe that the quality of the water we drink and bathe in has a long lasting effect on our health. There are so many studies done on water and how crucial it is to our health. There are some things you cannot just jam into a bottle made of plastic and expect it to be anything like artesian or glacial water even if it comes from such areas.

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abxyz0101
February 24, 2014 8:37 pm

Lithium carbonate is used to treat Bipolar Disorder, average dose being 300 mg three times a day with a target blood level of 0.6 to 1.2 mEq/L. Therapeutic window is small; it can be quite toxic when blood levels rise above 1.2.
I believe when taken as nutritional supplement, the dosage can be as small as 10 to 20 mg. I would like to know from Meg what was the dose you used. Apparently you used amino acid chelate of lithium, so the dosage may not be directly comparable with carbonate form.

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Meg in Minneapolis
February 24, 2014 10:54 pm
Reply to  abxyz0101

Sumanial – I buy my Lithium Aspartate from Swanson Vitamins…100 caps for $4.99, each cap providing 5 mg. From things that I have read, Lithium Orotate, 5 mg. provides the same benefits.

I add that there is also an association between Alzheimer’s Disease and low thyroid function. For prevention…and for improved quality of life…I think that it is wise to add an iodine supplement. Noteworthy: Five doctors tested all their patients, learning that 94.8% were deficient in iodine. I like Iodoral, that provides both Iodine and Iodide. Vitamin A (another common deficiency) also improves thyroid function. For anyone who notices eyebrows thinning, swelling under the eyes, or chilly hands and feet, I’d also add dessicated thyroid (choosing a reliable brand such as Westroid). All of these are at-home steps a person can take to improve health, getting medical help if there is not swift improvement.

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YIN TSE
Guest
YIN TSE
February 24, 2014 8:39 pm

All the BS, all the BS….., all the BS….
How do they relate to PRAN, the stock? really.

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abxyz0101
February 24, 2014 9:05 pm
Reply to  YIN TSE

PRAN will be worthless if off shelf alternative natural supplements (Lithium?) will do the trick of helping/improving AD/Huntington’s. Even a non rocket scientist will understand.

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lily
lily
February 24, 2014 11:04 pm

Ditto what Louis said. Is there a way to follow a thread without posting?

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abxyz0101
February 25, 2014 6:39 pm
Reply to  lily

Tangent is fine.
Benitec (BNIKF in OTC) closed today at $1.94, up 12 cents on a 300,000 + volume.
It had private placement of 35 million units yesterday at Australian $1.07 each. The purchasers/financiers are sitting on 90% cool gain in one day, but it won’t last. As they try to cash in the gain price will come down. I will nibble around $1.20 still leaving them 20% gain for their troubles.

What does BNIKF has to do with PRAN?
Both are equally pretty for a horny.

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yogiman
yogiman
February 26, 2014 11:11 pm
Reply to  lily

You can bookmark this page, then refresh ( Control F5) each time before using. Claire, you should also check out this thread for GS. http://www.stockgumshoe.com/reviews/biotech-supertrader/this-tiny-unknown-biotech-is-about-to-unleash-its-holy-grail-drug/#comments

pmd3nka
pmd3nka
February 25, 2014 3:25 am

There is another Australian stock that has taken off, far more than Prana. It is Benitec (BLT on ASX), which is testing a Hep C `cure’. Any comments?

Sorry to be off on a tangent.

Phil

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yogiman
yogiman
February 26, 2014 11:13 pm
Reply to  pmd3nka

Phil, see above link.

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