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Explaining the Link Between Sleep and Alzheimer’s

Summary: A new study published in brain reveals that just one night of sleep disruption causes an increase in amyloid beta in the brains of healthy, middle aged people. A full week of sleep disturbances leads to a build up of Tau, another protein associated with Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. The study sheds light on why poor sleep has previously been associated with the development of Alzheimer’s and other dementias.

Source: WUSTL.

Poor sleep leads to increase in Alzheimer’s proteins associated with cognitive decline.

A good night’s sleep refreshes body and mind, but a poor night’s sleep can do just the opposite. A study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Radboud University Medical Centre in the Netherlands, and Stanford University has shown that disrupting just one night of sleep in healthy, middle-aged adults causes an increase in amyloid beta, a brain protein associated with Alzheimer’s disease. And a week of tossing and turning leads to an increase in another brain protein, tau, which has been linked to brain damage in Alzheimer’s and other neurological diseases.

“We showed that poor sleep is associated with higher levels of two Alzheimer’s-associated proteins,” said David M. Holtzman, MD, the Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor, head of the Department of Neurology and the study’s senior author. “We think that perhaps chronic poor sleep during middle age may increase the risk of Alzheimer’s later in life.”

These findings, published July 10 in the journal Brain, may help explain why poor sleep has been associated with the development of dementias such as Alzheimer’s.

More than 5 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease, which is characterized by gradual memory loss and cognitive decline. The brains of people with Alzheimer’s are dotted with plaques of amyloid beta protein and tangles of tau protein, which together cause brain tissue to atrophy and die. There are no therapies that have been proven to prevent, slow or reverse the course of the disease.

Previous studies by Holtzman, co-first author Yo-El Ju, MD, an assistant professor of neurology, and others have shown that poor sleep increases the risk of cognitive problems. People with sleep apnea, for example, a condition in which people repeatedly stop breathing at night, are at risk for developing mild cognitive impairment an average of 10 years earlier than people without the sleep disorder. Mild cognitive impairment is an early warning sign for Alzheimer’s disease.

But it wasn’t clear how poor sleep damages the brain. To find out, the researchers — Holtzman; Ju; co-first author and graduate student Sharon Ooms of Radboud; Jurgen Claassen, MD, PhD, of Radboud; Emmanuel Mignot, MD, PhD, of Stanford; and colleagues — studied 17 healthy adults ages 35 to 65 with no sleep problems or cognitive impairments. Each participant wore an activity monitor on the wrist for up to two weeks that measured how much time they spent sleeping each night.

After five or more successive nights of wearing the monitor, each participant came to the School of Medicine to spend a night in a specially designed sleep room. The room is dark, soundproof, climate-controlled and just big enough for one; a perfect place for sleeping, even as the participants wore headphones over the ears and electrodes on the scalp to monitor brain waves.

Half the participants were randomly assigned to have their sleep disrupted during the night they spent in the sleep room. Every time their brain signals settled into the slow-wave pattern characteristic of deep, dreamless sleep, the researchers sent a series of beeps through the headphones, gradually getting louder, until the participants’ slow-wave patterns dissipated and they entered shallower sleep.

The next morning, the participants who had been beeped out of slow-wave sleep reported feeling tired and unrefreshed, even though they had slept just as long as usual and rarely recalled being awakened during the night. Each underwent a spinal tap so the researchers could measure the levels of amyloid beta and tau in the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord.

A month or more later, the process was repeated, except that those who had their sleep disrupted the first time were allowed to sleep through the night undisturbed, and those who had slept uninterrupted the first time were disturbed by beeps when they began to enter slow-wave sleep.

The researchers compared each participant’s amyloid beta and tau levels after the disrupted night to the levels after the uninterrupted night, and found a 10 percent increase in amyloid beta levels after a single night of interrupted sleep, but no corresponding increase in tau levels. However, participants whose activity monitors showed they had slept poorly at home for the week before the spinal tap showed a spike in levels of tau.

“We were not surprised to find that tau levels didn’t budge after just one night of disrupted sleep while amyloid levels did, because amyloid levels normally change more quickly than tau levels,” Ju said. “But we could see, when the participants had several bad nights in a row at home, that their tau levels had risen.”

Slow-wave sleep is the deep sleep that people need to wake up feeling rested. Sleep apnea disrupts slow-wave sleep, so people with the disorder often wake up feeling unrefreshed, even after a full eight hours of shut-eye.

Slow-wave sleep is also the time when neurons rest and the brain clears away the molecular byproducts of mental activity that accumulate during the day, when the brain is busily thinking and working.

Ju thinks it is unlikely that a single night or even a week of poor sleep, miserable though it may be, has much effect on overall risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. Amyloid beta and tau levels probably go back down the next time the person has a good night’s sleep, she said.

“The main concern is people who have chronic sleep problems,” Ju said. “I think that may lead to chronically elevated amyloid levels, which animal studies have shown lead to increased risk of amyloid plaques and Alzheimer’s.”

Ju emphasized that her study was not designed to determine whether sleeping more or sleeping better reduce risk of Alzheimer’s but, she said, neither can hurt.

“Many, many Americans are chronically sleep-deprived, and it negatively affects their health in many ways,” Ju said. “At this point, we can’t say whether improving sleep will reduce your risk of developing Alzheimer’s. All we can really say is that bad sleep increases levels of some proteins that are associated with Alzheimer’s disease. But a good night’s sleep is something you want to be striving for anyway.”

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Funding: Funding provided by National Institutes of Health, J.P.B Foundation, Alzheimer Nederland, Washington University Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

Source: Judy Martin Finch – WUSTL
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Yo-El Ju.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Slow wave sleep disruption increases cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-β levels” by Yo-El S. Ju, Sharon J. Ooms, Courtney Sutphen, Shannon L. Macauley, Margaret A. Zangrilli, Gina Jerome, Anne M. Fagan, Emmanuel Mignot, John M. Zempel, Jurgen A.H.R. Claassen, and David M. Holtzman in Brain. Published online July 10 2017 doi:10.1093/brain/awx148

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
WUSTL “Explaining the Link Between Sleep and Alzheimer’s.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 10 July 2017.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/sleep-alzheimers-7058/&gt;.

Abstract

Slow wave sleep disruption increases cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-β levels

Sleep deprivation increases amyloid-β, suggesting that chronically disrupted sleep may promote amyloid plaques and other downstream Alzheimer’s disease pathologies including tauopathy or inflammation. To date, studies have not examined which aspect of sleep modulates amyloid-β or other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers. Seventeen healthy adults (age 35–65 years) without sleep disorders underwent 5–14 days of actigraphy, followed by slow wave activity disruption during polysomnogram, and cerebrospinal fluid collection the following morning for measurement of amyloid-β, tau, total protein, YKL-40, and hypocretin. Data were compared to an identical protocol, with a sham condition during polysomnogram. Specific disruption of slow wave activity correlated with an increase in amyloid-β40 (r = 0.610, P = 0.009). This effect was specific for slow wave activity, and not for sleep duration or efficiency. This effect was also specific to amyloid-β, and not total protein, tau, YKL-40, or hypocretin. Additionally, worse home sleep quality, as measured by sleep efficiency by actigraphy in the six nights preceding lumbar punctures, was associated with higher tau (r = 0.543, P = 0.045). Slow wave activity disruption increases amyloid-β levels acutely, and poorer sleep quality over several days increases tau. These effects are specific to neuronally-derived proteins, which suggests they are likely driven by changes in neuronal activity during disrupted sleep.

“Slow wave sleep disruption increases cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-β levels” by Yo-El S. Ju, Sharon J. Ooms, Courtney Sutphen, Shannon L. Macauley, Margaret A. Zangrilli, Gina Jerome, Anne M. Fagan, Emmanuel Mignot, John M. Zempel, Jurgen A.H.R. Claassen, and David M. Holtzman in Brain. Published online July 10 2017 doi:10.1093/brain/awx148

How to plan for short term and long term care needs of loves ones with Alzheimer’s?

It is challenging in Silicon Valley to care for a family member with Alzheimer’s.  Most families are busy working and some are located in another state. Even when some families live in the same household, they do not want to be bothered by a visit from police or social worker when their mother with Alzheimer suddenly shouts in the middle of the night and wanted her son in law in jail.

Most families would hire a caregiver during  the day and they take turns in caring for their parents during the weekend or after work.  Some families send their parents to a care home of 6 clients served by 2 caregivers for 24/7 care.

For those who have caregivers in their parent’s home, they share the cost of around $1000 or more per week of caregiving expense since their parents wanted to be around their house.

It is less stress for Alzheimer’s clients to be in the same environment like their own house.

There are lucky ones with long term care insurance or a partner and with a bigger extended families to help out in the care.

Each day is different, so a respite care is much needed like a one week caregiver live in.

If you need a caregiver for 4 hrs, 24 hrs or a week, call 408-854-1883 or email motherhealth@gmail.com for advice on caregiving schedule. We match and monitor and train caregivers for you to meet the needs of your mother with Alzheimer’s.

care 1

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Vaginal Bleeding Between Periods

Overview

Abnormal vaginal bleeding between periods is also called intermenstrual bleeding, spotting, and metrorrhagia. When bleeding occurs between normal periods, there are many possible causes.

While some causes may be easy to treat, others can indicate a serious underlying condition. Whether you notice spotting or heavier bleeding between periods, it’s important to see your doctor for testing, diagnosis, and treatment options. Potential causes of bleeding between periods include:

  • a growth in your uterus or cervix
  • stress
  • a change in medication
  • a miscarriage
  • vaginal dryness
  • a hormone imbalance
  • cancer

CAUSES

Causes of vaginal bleeding between periods

Bleeding between periods isn’t a normal part of the menstrual cycle.

The average cycle lasts 21 to 35 days. Normal vaginal bleeding, also known as your period, can happen for a few days to a week. Any bleeding outside of this is considered abnormal and can be caused by a variety of factors. These include:

1. Hormonal imbalance

Estrogen and progesterone are the two hormones that regulate your cycle. You may have spotting if they get out of balance. The following can all affect your hormone balance:

As well, some women spot during ovulation as a result of hormonal changes.

When starting any type of hormonal contraceptive, abnormal bleeding is common during the first three months, according to the National Health Services of the United Kingdom. These contraceptives include:

2. Pregnancy complications

Complications during pregnancy can cause spotting. Both a miscarriage and an ectopic pregnancy can cause bleeding. An ectopic pregnancy occurs when a fertilized egg implants itself in the fallopian tubeinstead of the uterus.

Spotting during pregnancy may not mean you’re having a miscarriage. However, if you’re pregnant and experience any vaginal bleeding, you should contact your doctor immediately.

3. Uterine fibroids

Uterine fibroids are noncancerous growths that form in the uterus. They aren’t uncommon in women who’ve given birth.

4. Infection

Vaginal bleeding between periods may indicate an infection of your reproductive organs. Infection can cause inflammation and bleeding. Causes include:

5. Cancer

Less commonly, a cancer of any of these organs can cause bleeding:

6. Rare causes

Other possible causes of vaginal bleeding are rare and include:

Gonorrhea home remedies

From Dr Mercola

Story at-a-glance

  • Women may soak apple cider vinegar into a tampon and insert it into their vagina for a few minutes to help treat vaginal gonorrhea
  • The aloe vera species Barbadensis milla is the only one recommended for gonorrhea treatment, because others may worsen the infection

Is gonorrhea treatable? Certainly. Conventional treatment for gonorrhea involves taking antibiotics for a certain number of days or weeks. However, this method has proven to be detrimental in the long run, because more and more strains of gonorrhea are becoming antibiotic-resistant.

As an alternative treatment, try using these home remedies that are known for their powerful antimicrobial properties:1

Garlic

This popular cooking ingredient may help fight gonorrhea thanks to its compound called allicin. Allicin works with garlic’s other compounds to become a powerful antibacterial agent that can fight antibiotic-resistant strains.

To gain this benefit, simply add garlic to your diet regularly. You can crush several cloves of garlic as well and directly apply it to the site of infection, then rinse afterward.2

Apple Cider Vinegar

Vinegar’s acidic properties can help eliminate bacteria, and apple cider vinegar happens to be one of the best at this. You can add it to your daily diet to help cleanse your organs. You may also add it to your bathwater and soak in it for several minutes, then rinse afterwards.

In addition, women may soak vinegar into a tampon and insert it into their vagina for a few minutes to help treat vaginal gonorrhea.

Echinacea

A popular flower native to America, Echinacea holds potent antibacterial properties that may help treat gonorrhea. Simply purchase Echinacea essential oil, dilute it in a carrier oil and apply it to the infected area, then rinse after a few minutes.

Tea Tree Oil

Tea tree oil is one of the most popular antibacterial solutions around, and is known to help alleviate various infections.

Women can use it to treat their gonorrhea by adding a few drops of diluted tea tree oil on a tampon and then inserting it into their vagina for a few minutes. For men, you can apply the diluted solution directly on the infected areas.

Aloe Vera

The aloe vera species Barbadensis milla is the only one recommended for gonorrhea treatment, because others may worsen the infection. This is one of the top recommended home remedies for gonorrhea, as it has been proven effective against bacterial infections.

Rosemary

This popular cooking herb contains over 40 antibacterial and 20 antiviral compounds. You can create a rosemary solution by mixing 1 tablespoon of dried rosemary in 1 cup of water, which you must take twice a day.

You may also add fresh rosemary to your diet to receive more of its antibacterial benefits at the same time.3

Yogurt

Live and active cultured yogurt contains healthy bacteria strains that can help fight gonococcal bacteria. Women can coat a tampon with plain homemade yogurt and insert it into their vagina to experience relief from pain and itching. Men may also directly apply it to their infected areas.4

But before you use any of these home remedies, it’s important to consult with your doctor first to check for any adverse effects. If using any of the essential oils, make sure to do a skin patch test first to see if any allergic reactions occur.

Is Donald Trump responsible for rising health insurance premiums, as Chris Murphy said?

Says because of Donald Trump, “the IRS decided to stop enforcing the individual mandate that was the underpinning of the ACA. That has resulted in insurance companies all across the country jacking their rates up, explicitly because they don’t believe that healthy people will buy insurance.”

— Chris Murphy on Monday, June 26th, 2017 in a video

Is Donald Trump responsible for rising health insurance premiums, as Chris Murphy said?

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., criticized the Trump administration’s attempts to weaken the Affordable Care Act in a Facebook video on June 26, 2017.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., blamed President Donald Trump for insurance rate hikes through the administration’s attempts to weaken the Affordable Care Act.

“It all started when he issued an executive order … that commanded all federal agencies to start undermining the ACA, and his agencies listened,” Murphy said in the June 26 video. “The IRS decided to stop enforcing the individual mandate that was the underpinning of the ACA. That has resulted in insurance companies all across the country jacking their rates up, explicitly because they don’t believe that healthy people will buy insurance.”

Insurance rates have indeed been on the rise, but we wondered whether it could all be traced back to the IRS and a weakened enforcement of the individual mandate.

We found that Trump has continued the weak enforcement of the individual mandate in place during the Obama administration, freezing a change that was set to begin with the 2016 tax year.

But his party’s rhetoric on repealing the Affordable Care Act, as well as other issues, have been linked to premium rate increases.

The role of the IRS

The IRS is the agency tasked with enforcing the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate, which requires most individuals to obtain health insurance or pay a tax penalty for going without.

The mandate was designed to encourage healthy people to enter the risk pool and thus lower insurance costs.

When people file their individual income tax returns, they must indicate their health insurance coverage or list a waiver or exemption. Otherwise, they must pay the penalty for lacking coverage. For the 2016 tax year, those who weren’t covered had to pay 2.5 percent of taxable income or $695, whichever was higher.

Those tax returns that failed to do any of these three actions were considered “silent returns,” and elicited a letter from the IRS alerting the taxpayer of the issue.

“Most of the time the taxpayer didn’t get back, and there was nothing else the IRS could do,” said Chris Condeluci, a former Republican tax counsel to the Senate Finance Committee when the Affordable Care Act was written.

President Barack Obama instructed the IRS to stop processing silent returns beginning with 2016 tax filings to punish taxpayers expecting a refund who failed to comply with the law.

Trump’s executive order scrapped that change.

“Processing silent returns means that taxpayer returns are not systematically rejected by the IRS at the time of filing, allowing the returns to be processed and minimizing burden on taxpayers, including those expecting a refund,” the IRS said in a Feb. 15 press release. “When the IRS has questions about a tax return, taxpayers may receive follow-up questions and correspondence at a future date, after the filing process is completed. This is similar to how we handled this in previous years, and this reflects the normal IRS post-filing compliance procedures that we follow.”

Murphy’s team pointed us to that announcement when we asked for evidence for Murphy’s statement.

Trump’s order did cause the IRS to change direction internally, but outwardly, the agency is enforcing the same policy. “They’re adhering to the same enforcement policy as the Obama administration did. At the end of the day it’s merely business as usual when it comes to the IRS,” Condeluci added.

The IRS may have maintained the status quo, but the announcement still made an impact.

“It was noted by the actuaries who calculate rates. But it’s another element in a complex mosaic in factors that lead to rate increases,” said Dan Mendelson, the president of Avalere, a health care consulting firm.

Then there’s Congress.

Regardless of the Trump administration’s impact on the IRS, Congress is working to effectively scrap the individual mandate. The House Committee on Appropriations has drafted a bill that would terminate the tax penalty on those who go without insurance, which the House Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government approved on June 29.

Premiums on the rise

Insurance rates for the most popular type of exchange plan are an average of 18 percent higher than last year, according to Avalere. A combination of medical inflation and political volatility account for the hike, although it’s hard to apportion the causes of the rate increases. The individual mandate isn’t the only factor, though.

“Although the mandate is a reason for higher premiums for next year, it’s probably not the main reason,” said Sherry Glied, the dean of New York University’s Graduate School of Public Service. “The main reason is uncertainty about whether Congress will fund the ACA’s cost-sharing reductions.”

That’s a different animal.

Congress is weighing whether to continue funding the $8 billion pool of cost-sharing reduction subsidies under the ACA. In 2010, the House filed a lawsuit arguing the subsidies were illegal, and the Trump administration has not clarified whether it will defend them in court. The bipartisan budget bill passed late June did not include those funds.

“This is one of the larger premium hikes because there’s a lot of uncertainty about what’s going to happen to the insurance marketplace,” said Claire Brindis, the director of the Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California, San Francisco. “Whenever insurance companies feel like there’s going to be dramatic changes, they get skittish about profit margins.”

Our ruling

Murphy said that insurance companies are jacking up their rates because of the IRS’ weakened enforcement of the individual mandate under Trump.

That’s an exaggeration. The Trump administration has continued the same policies as Obama. A mandate to buy insurance is in place, but there’s not much punishment for those who refused to comply.

Murphy suggested that the individual mandate itself was key in keeping insurance rates low. In theory, the requirement invites greater diversity to the health insurance risk pool, but the IRS never had sufficient tools at its disposal to enforce it effectively.

Blaming rate increases on the IRS is too simplistic, particularly as there is no evidence of a direct link. A number of other factors are at play, including uncertainty around future health care subsidies.

Because there has been little outward change in the IRS enforcement policies, we rate this statement Mostly False.

Share The Facts
Chris Murphy
Connecticut senator
Says because of Donald Trump, “the IRS decided to stop enforcing the individual mandate that was the underpinning of the ACA. That has resulted in insurance companies all across the country jacking their rates up, explicitly because they don’t believe that healthy people will buy insurance.”

Trump appoints notorious anti-LGBT activist Bethany Kozma to key human rights position

Trump appoints notorious anti-LGBT activist Bethany Kozma to key human rights position


This makes us absolutely SICK to our stomachs:

Trump’s latest hire, Bethany Kozma, has made a career of attacking protections for transgender kids.

Now, Kozma is being tapped for important role at USAID — the federal agency that increases LGBT people’s access to housing, healthcare, and human rights around the world.[1]

connie — this is UNACCEPTABLE. We can’t ignore Trump’s continued attacks on the LGBT community.

If you care about Equality, please donate $5 right now to help us fight back:

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Bethany Kozma is viciously transphobic.

— She repeatedly degraded transgender kids by calling them “gender confused children.”
— She worked with anti-LGBT hate groups like the Family Research Council to overturn Obama’s protections for trans students.
— And she argued that allowing trans students to use the bathroom would directly results in sexual assault against young girls.

And now, Kozma will become the senior adviser for women’s empowerment at USAID.

IS THIS A JOKE?! There is no question that Kozma cannot be trusted to defend the safety and concerns of trans women who desperately need our help.

This appointment is truly a slap in the face to the LGBT community.

If we’re going to fight Kozma and the bigots like her, we’ll need everyone doing their part. Please connie, we won’t be able to stop him without your help.

Donate whatever you can to protect Equality from Trump and his bigots:

Chip in $5 immediately →
Chip in $35 immediately →
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Or donate another amount →

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Thanks for standing up to hate,

Equality PAC

 

Independent physicians and care organizations in one telehealth app at Motherhealth

All health care providers, individuals with sole practice or those working in a care organization/group practice/hospitals/other institutions can now be found in the health concierge mobile application at Motherhealth , powered by mindbodyonline. This mobile app will be launched this August 1,2017 to start in the bay area cities first.

Email motherhealth@gmail.com your contact info , location, email, specialty, skype ID and availability including pricing ($100 per 15min consult, etc) for 15 min consult (in person, online, or via a video like skype).

This direct to health consumer business model aims to target all healthy and unhealthy population to help reduce chronic care costs. Those without health insurance are also served.

Both health consumers and health care professionals should have a gmail email account. For health care professionals, it is best to have a separate unique cell phone and number for your clients.

You can now meet and talk to a doctor for $100 for 15 minutes even without a health insurance. And get whole blood panel tests and other diagnostics from Life Extension to prevent any chronic health issues in the future.

Bay area health consumers needing caregivers for their homebound seniors can now use the app to call for a caregiver from Motherhealth to receive a response within 24 hours. Independent bayarea caregivers and caregiver home care agencies are welcome to join as independent contractors of Motherhealth with 10% profit sharing and only takes 10% of your earnings.

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