Differences between revisions 1 and 23 (spanning 22 versions)
Revision 1 as of 2025-02-27 09:25:26
Size: 229
Comment:
Revision 23 as of 2025-03-31 02:14:46
Size: 3223
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
== wiki.keithl.com/DanielGibbs ==
=== A Tattoo on my Brain ===
=== wiki.keithl.com/DanielGibbs ===
= A Tattoo on my Brain =
Line 4: Line 4:
[[ | Daniel Gibbs ]] with [[ | Teresa H. Barker ]] ~+[[ https://tattooonmybrain.com/about-me/ | Daniel Gibbs ]] with [[ https://search.worldcat.org/search?q=au%3D%22Barker%2C+Teresa%22&author=Barker%2C+Teresa%7CBarker+Teresa | Teresa H. Barker ]]+~
Line 6: Line 6:
Also see [[ https://search.worldcat.org/title/1395425649 | Dispatches from the land of Alzheimer's ]] 2024

No mention of (causal) pathogens, bacteria, viruses, herpes.
"On
 .p24 journalist Greg O'Brien 2014 "On Pluto: inside the Mind of Alzheimer's" - [[ https://wccls.bibliocommons.com/v2/search?custom_edit=false&query=title%3A(On%20Pluto%3A%20inside%20the%20Mind%20of%20Alzheimer%27s)&searchType=bl&suppress=true | CMill 362.19863 O'Brien ]] 2006
 .p27 2007 rosesdistorted smell
|| reduced smell || [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyposmia | hyposmia ]] ||
|| no smell || [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anosmia | anosmia ]] ||
|| hallucinatory smell || [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phantosmia | phantosmia ]] ||
|| distorted smell || [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysosmia | dysosmia ]] ||

 .p34 Brain image of author in 2007, age 56 (b.1951?), pituitary adenoma, radiologist: "slightly more brain atrophy than would be expected at this age.

Cholesterol is mentioned on page 47-48:

"It's not as if the APOE gene is designed for destructive purposes: it's not. The APOE gene is the DNA blueprint for a specific lipoprotein, a protein that is involved in the transport of certain lipids in the blood. It comes in three variants, or alleles: APOE-2, APOE-3, and APOE-4. For reasons that are still not entirely clear, this gene for a protein involved in cholesterol transport also affects risk for acquiring Alzheimer's disease. It seems there is an effect on the proteinAPOE e4 polymorphism in young adults is associated with improved attention and indexed by distinct neural signatures beta-amyloid in the brain, but the mechanism of APOE-4 risk is probably more complicated. We just don't know yet what it is."

 .1x APOE-2 decreased risk
 .2x APOE-3 0.13x risk
 .1x APOE-4 3.0x risk
 .2x APOE-4 12.0x risk

 .[[ https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-14279-8.pdf | Exceptionally low likelihood of Alzheimer's dementia in APOE2 homozygotes from a 5,000-person neuropathological study ]]
 .[[ https://karger.com/nps/article-abstract/43/3/200/232727/A-Possible-Role-of-Apolipoprotein-E-Polymorphism | A Possible Role of Apolipoprotein E Polymorphism in Predisposition to Higher Education 2001 ]]
 .[[ http://www.paul-tofts-phd.org.uk/CV/reprints/B197_apoe_e4_neuorimage2013.pdf | APOE e4 polymorphism in young adults is associated with improved attention and indexed by distinct neural signatures ]]
 .[[ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0197458011003010 | APOE ε4 differentially influences change in memory performance depending on age. The SMART-MR study ]]
 .[[ https://access.archive-ouverte.unige.ch/access/metadata/ba1902f4-b423-4528-b068-d01c2b9fee4f/download | APOE ε4 and cognitive function in early life: a meta-analysis ]]

wiki.keithl.com/DanielGibbs

A Tattoo on my Brain

A Neurologist's Personal Battle against Alzheimer's Disease

Daniel Gibbs with Teresa H. Barker

Cedar Mill Library 616.8311 GIBBS

Also see Dispatches from the land of Alzheimer's 2024

No mention of (causal) pathogens, bacteria, viruses, herpes. "On

  • p24 journalist Greg O'Brien 2014 "On Pluto: inside the Mind of Alzheimer's" - CMill 362.19863 O'Brien 2006

  • p27 2007 rosesdistorted smell

reduced smell

hyposmia

no smell

anosmia

hallucinatory smell

phantosmia

distorted smell

dysosmia

  • p34 Brain image of author in 2007, age 56 (b.1951?), pituitary adenoma, radiologist: "slightly more brain atrophy than would be expected at this age.

Cholesterol is mentioned on page 47-48:

"It's not as if the APOE gene is designed for destructive purposes: it's not. The APOE gene is the DNA blueprint for a specific lipoprotein, a protein that is involved in the transport of certain lipids in the blood. It comes in three variants, or alleles: APOE-2, APOE-3, and APOE-4. For reasons that are still not entirely clear, this gene for a protein involved in cholesterol transport also affects risk for acquiring Alzheimer's disease. It seems there is an effect on the proteinAPOE e4 polymorphism in young adults is associated with improved attention and indexed by distinct neural signatures beta-amyloid in the brain, but the mechanism of APOE-4 risk is probably more complicated. We just don't know yet what it is."

DanielGibbs (last edited 2025-03-31 03:50:56 by KeithLofstrom)