On 2017 Jan 13, Craig Brown commented:
I would welcome more research in this matter, also. As a clinician, for many years I have found this to yield significant visual and cognitive functional improvement in many patients with mild to moderate cerebral atrophy and vascular dementia, particularly those with MTHFR polymorphisms.
Over several years, the benefit has been reliable. Patients who quit it, often come back and and restart it, because they notice loss of functional improvements that returns upon resumption.
Because Folic acid does not cross the Blood Brain Barrier, it can build up blocking active l-methylfolate transport into the brain and retina, also impairing DHFR, Dihydrofolate Reductase which impairs methylation and BH4 recycling- essential for serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine production- which in turn are essential for mood, attention,sleep and memory.
I find it works optimally when combined with Folic Acid avoidance- to reduce BBB blockade, riboflavin to enhance MTHFR methylation, and Vitamin D to enhance folate absorption. It has a long record of safety, with few serious side effects, for a condition that has few effective treatments. All this is to say, more research is surely a good thing here, but excessive skepticism deprives patients of a chance to try a low risk frequently helpful but not magic option.
It is classified as a Medical Food, in part, because our FDA does not encourage formulating drug products that have multiple active ingredients, particularly ingredients that occur naturally in foods and in human metabolism. Medical Foods were implemented by the FDA specifically for higher concentrations of natural food based substances important to address genetic metabolic impairments, in this case, impairment of DFHR and MTHFR; which may contribute to cerebral ischemia, atrophy, and dementia.
A final thought, double blind experiments are the ideal gold standard, however, the elderly, and the demented are considered high risk populations and have such strong protections in place at the NIH, that placebo studies are difficult to justify to, or get approval from, any Institutional Review Board IRB, when previous benefit has been shown, because that amounts to knowingly withholding treatment. We may have to content ourselves with non-placebo trials.
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