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Tau and it's relationship to Amyloid, are the current top hypothesis. Another way to look at why the removal of amyloid may not be effective in repairing damage is to think of it like a blocked pipe. A pipe gets blocked, and the pipe itself gets damaged, causing a leak.
The block can be removed, but that doesn't repair the pipe. In my example, the pharmaceuticals are removing the blockage, but the damage is still done. Having said that, I believe that as we learn more about what we currently call Alzheimer's, we'll discover that we've been lumping multiple diseases under a single label. I believe the amyloid hypothesis, and Type 3 diabetes hypothesis, both have merit. There may well be others. |
So entirely possible they are simply part of how or brain deals with brain cell death.
Its possible at this point it's not a "disease" at all, at least no more than the STI we are all dieing from (our parents had sex and now we get to die).
Prior to 1900 or so, average life expectancy was something like 25 or 30, our brains simply never evolved to live as long as they do now, some people age faster than others..
The problem for the scientific basis is all the brain research has gone into plaques and ignored all the other conditions that lead to cell death and aging, it's going to be a while before other directions can be properly explored, and plaques for sure still have the momentum despite failing at every turn.