UF researchers find that ‘peanut butter’ test can help diagnose Alzheimer’s disease の情報です。
私は、ためしてガッテンが好きです。NHKというのも安心です。
ためしてガッテンは水曜日の夜なので、とても見やすい時間帯。ご飯を食べながら毎週のように見ています。
さて、このサイトは耳に関する病気解決を支援する情報発信を目的にしていますが、
実は、耳も鼻も目も すべて 体中がつながっているので、耳だけをフォーカスしていても
症状が改善したいときもあると考えています。よって、ためしてガッテンで耳以外のその他体に関する不調なことに対しても
情報を取得することをオススメていています。
ちなみに、ためしてガッテンとは、
毎回、身近な生活の話題の一つのテーマを、最新の科学を駆使・実践していくことで今までの常識を覆し、
新しい常識を発見していく。民放の情報番組と比べると演出はやや抑え気味で、地味なテーマを取り上げるていきます。
この地味なテーマも好き。
「ツボ健康法のツボ」などのテーマに洒落が聞いていて、最高です。
また、NHKとのことで、番組で特定の企業に属する商品は取り扱わず、一般的に全国規模で生産されている健康食品などを取り扱うことが多いのも特徴。
効果ありと取り上げられた品物は爆発的に売れることが多く、よく知られた自然食品の中には翌日、売り切れする店が続出しています、、納豆やバナナはそうですよね!
また、古くからある自然食品などにおいて、民放などが有害成分があるなどと警鐘を鳴らすと、
それについても反証を行うなどし安全性を確認して、とても真面目です。
ためしてガッテン。これからもどんどん良い情報を発信して下さい!
また、この動画にはためしてガッテンの情報が発信されていますので、是非ウォッチングして下さい!
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A dollop of peanut butter and a ruler can be used to confirm a diagnosis of early stage Alzheimer’s disease, University of Florida Health researchers have found. Jennifer Stamps, a graduate student in the UF McKnight Brain Institute Center for Smell and Taste, and her colleagues reported the findings of a small pilot study in the Journal of the Neurological Sciences. Stamps came up with the idea of using peanut butter to test for smell sensitivity while she was working with Dr. Kenneth Heilman, the James E. Rooks distinguished professor of neurology and health psychology in the UF College of Medicine’s department of neurology.She noticed while shadowing in Heilman’s clinic that patients were not tested for their sense of smell. The ability to smell is associated with the first cranial nerve and is often one of the first things to be affected in cognitive decline. Stamps also had been working in the laboratory of Linda Bartoshuk, the William P. Bushnell presidentially endowed professor in the College of Dentistry’s department of community dentistry and behavioral sciences and director of human research in the Center for Smell and Taste.
“Dr. Heilman said, ‘If you can come up with something quick and inexpensive, we can do it,'” Stamps said.
She thought of peanut butter because, she said, it is a “pure odorant” that is only detected by the olfactory nerve and is easy to access.
コメント
As someone with a deviated septum, nasal polyps, and collapsed nostrils, I can’t breathe through my left nostril at all. For me, this test wouldn’t be particularly useful, but that’s why there’s more than one test available. I imagine for most people this peanut butter test is at least nominally useful.
I have a deviated septum and my nose is always stuffed up. How does that figure into the study?
…..just another fascinating use for peanut butter, I’m working on my Illuminati secret uses of the nut butter book, soon to come out.
Must read!
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That guys eyes weren’t closed… what was he staring at .. hmmmm
What a great idea!
Use shit instead of peanut butter. I bet they smell it faster.
This is bullshit. Some people can’t even smell
Fascinating study, and anything new we can learn will lead us a step closer to a cure! Those caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s can find additional help here: https://www.homeandhearthcare.com/services/alzheimers-dementia-care/
this was a pilot study using 24 subjects.Of the 24 patients tested who had mild cognitive impairment, which
sometimes signals Alzheimer’s disease and sometimes turns out to be
something else, about 10 patients showed a left nostril impairment and
14 patients did not. The researchers said more studies must be conducted
to fully understand the implications.