High cholesterol diet could help people with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease

According to early studies in mice, a diet high in cholesterol may help people with , a which damages the brain.

Patients with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) struggle to produce a fatty sheath around their nerves, which is essential for function.

A study, published in Nature Medicine, showed that a high-cholesterol diet could increase production.

The authors said the mice “improved dramatically”.

PMD is one of many in which patients struggle to produce the . It protects and helps messages pass along the nerves.

Patients with Pelizaeus Merzbacher disease PMD struggle to produce a fatty sheath around their nerves which is essential for function photo

Patients with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) struggle to produce a fatty sheath around their nerves, which is essential for function

Without the sheath, messages do not travel down the nerve – resulting in a range of problems including movement and cognition.

Researchers at the of Experimental Medicine, in Germany, performed a trial on mice with the disease and fed them a .

The first tests were on mice when they were six weeks old, after signs of PMD had already emerged. Those fed a normal diet continued to get worse, while those fed a cholesterol-enriched diet stabilized.

“This six-week-long delayed the decline in motor co-ordination,” the scientists said.

Further tests showed that starting the diet early was more beneficial, leading the researchers to conclude that in mice “treatment should begin early in life and continue into adulthood”.

This study was only in mice, meaning it is not known if there would be a similar effect in people – or if there would, how early treatment would have to start.

The authors of the report said: does not cure PMD, but has a striking potential to relieve defects.”

It is thought the cholesterol frees up a “traffic jam” inside cells in the brain. The disease is caused by producing too much of a protein needed in myelin, which then becomes stuck inside the cells. It is thought the extra cholesterol helps to free up the protein.

 

 

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Posted by on Jun 17 2012. Filed under Health, Science & Technology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0.

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