The effectiveness of vitamin E treatment in alzheimer’s disease

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Abstract

Vitamin E was proposed as treatment for Alzheimer’s disease many years ago. However, the effectiveness of the drug is not clear. Vitamin E is an antioxidant and neuroprotector and it has anti-inflammatory and hypocholesterolemic properties, driving to its importance for brain health. Moreover, the levels of vitamin E in Alzheimer’s disease patients are lower than in non-demented controls. Thus, vitamin E could be a good candidate to have beneficial effects against Alzheimer’s. However, evidence is consistent with a limited effectiveness of vitamin E in slowing progression of dementia; the information is mixed and inconclusive. The question is why does vitamin E fail to treat Alzheimer’s disease? In this paper we review the studies with and without positive results in Alzheimer’s disease and we discuss the reasons why vitamin E as treatment sometimes has positive results on cognition but at others, it does not.

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Lloret, A., Esteve, D., Monllor, P., Cervera-Ferri, A., & Lloret, A. (2019, February 2). The effectiveness of vitamin E treatment in alzheimer’s disease. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20040879

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