{"id":163961,"date":"2026-03-29T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-03-29T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/"},"modified":"2026-03-29T05:43:22","modified_gmt":"2026-03-29T05:43:22","slug":"reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/pl\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/","title":{"rendered":"Reversing Alzheimer&#8217;s \u2014 The Forgotten Causes and Cures Big Pharma Buried"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"best-of-articles\">\n<div class=\"card-ba\">\n<div class=\"inner-ba\">\n<div class=\"left-ba\">\n<img decoding=\"async\" class=\"medical-heart-icon-ba\" src=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\"><\/p>\n<p class=\"heading-ba\">A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"right-ba\">\n<div class=\"tag-ba\">WA\u017bNY<\/div>\n<div class=\"copy-ba\">\n<p class=\"heading-ba\">A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<p class=\"description-ba\">Our team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.mercola.com\/personalized-newsletter\" target=\"_blank\">See exactly what&#8217;s changing \u2192<\/a>\n<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>Alzheimer\u2019s dementia is one of the most significant medical challenges our country faces (e.g., it places an incredible burden upon society, e.g., last year it was estimated to cost the United States 360 billion dollars).<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref1\">1<\/span><\/sup> Yet, despite spending billions for research each year, cures remain elusive, something many believe results from the flawed belief that eliminating the amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer\u2019s will fix it. In turn, as I showed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Decades of amyloid therapies have never produced a beneficial treatment.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>The newest \u201cbreakthrough\u201d amyloid-eliminating monoclonal antibodies, at best slightly slow the progression of Alzheimer\u2019s while simultaneously causing a host of side effects, including brain bleeding and swelling in over a quarter of recipients.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>The entire amyloid industry rests upon a fraudulent study no one wanted to retract due to how much was invested in the amyloid hypothesis.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In short, the money behind this juggernaut has caused research into the real causes of Alzheimer\u2019s to be suppressed. For example, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a> I highlighted how coconut oil MCTs (safely) do more than any of the costly amyloid drugs \u2014 yet virtually no one knows this.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref2\">2<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<div class=\"video-rwd\">\n<figure class=\"op-interactive aspect-ratio\">\n<\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Dale Bredesen\u2019s Discovery<\/h2>\n<p>Many are also unaware of a 2022 study that should have revolutionized the entire Alzheimer\u2019s field:<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref3\">3<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<div class=\"center-img\">\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/ImageServer\/public\/2025\/November\/change-in-cognitive-performance.jpg\" alt=\"change in cognitive performance\">\n<\/div>\n<p>That protocol was based on Dale Bredesen\u2019s insightful realizations that:<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref4\">4<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Amyloid protein is a protective mechanism the brain uses to protect itself from stressors that endanger brain tissue \u2014 making attempts to treat Alzheimer\u2019s by eliminating it are doomed to fail.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>The brain is designed to be able to adapt to the needs of life, so it is always creating or pruning neural connections and brain cells. Alzheimer\u2019s results from the loss of signals that sustain brain cells and the dismantling of neural connections, outweighing the formation of new neural connections, a process that gradually compounds over the decades.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Rather than there being one type of Alzheimer\u2019s, there are actually multiple types that each require different treatment approaches.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Beyond the 2022 trial, which showed individually targeted therapies could shift the brain\u2019s momentum from neurological degeneration to regrowth,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref5\">5<\/span><\/sup> a 2018 report of 100 patients from numerous providers also showed it treated Alzheimer\u2019s,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref6\">6<\/span><\/sup> as did a 2024 case series of patients with remarkable results,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref7\">7<\/span><\/sup> and there are now neurologists around the country administering Bredesen\u2019s protocol with success.<\/em><\/p>\n<h2>The 6 Types of Alzheimer\u2019s Disease<\/h2>\n<p>As this understanding of Alzheimer\u2019s has produced tangible results, this suggests the causes of Alzheimer\u2019s that Bredesen identified indeed play a key role in the disease \u2014 particularly since many other datasets corroborate their contribution to Alzheimer\u2019s. They are as follows:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 1: Inflammatory \u2014<\/strong> This form is driven by excessive inflammation, often metabolic or infectious in nature. Chronic activation of the immune system \u2014 due to factors such as insulin resistance, a poor diet, a leaky gut, or latent infections \u2014 leads the brain to engage in protective downsizing by removing synapses and neurons that are less essential for immediate survival. It often presents with classic Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss and typically develops in the sixties to seventies.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 1.5: Glycotoxic \u2014<\/strong> This subtype arises from insulin resistance and chronically elevated blood sugar. It leads to both inflammatory and trophic deficiencies, and is driven by glycotoxicity and the accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which impair cellular function and synaptic integrity. It typically appears in the late fifties to sixties.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Chronically elevated insulin promotes amyloid formation, as the enzyme the body uses to break down insulin is the same enzyme it uses to break down amyloid plaques.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref8\">8<\/span><\/sup><\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 2: Atrophic \u2014<\/strong> This type is caused by deficiencies in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">key nutrients, hormones, and other factors<\/a> that provide trophic (supportive) signals to brain cells, which then triggers a similar downsizing mechanism seen in Type 1. Type 2 tends to emerge about a decade later than Type 1.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> We find these nutritional deficiencies can result from poor circulation reducing existing nutrients reaching brain tissue, and hence often focus on improving circulation rather than extended supplementation.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 3: Toxic \u2014<\/strong> This subtype results from exposure to toxic substances that directly damage neurons. Common culprits include biotoxins, chronic infections, heavy metals, and industrial or household chemicals. Causative infections (discussed further <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) include Cytomegalovirus, Human Herpesvirus 1 or 6, Lyme disease, dental bacteria that can travel to the brain (e.g., P. gingivalis), and various fungal infections (as mold toxins are notorious for causing cognitive impairment at all ages).<\/p>\n<p>Type 3 uniquely causes widespread and often unpredictable neuronal death, occurs earlier in life \u2014 often between the forties and sixties \u2014 and is less strongly associated with genetic risk factors. Cognitive decline in this type is frequently accompanied by psychiatric symptoms, sensory changes, or executive dysfunction (e.g., difficulty with math, organization, executive tasks), rather than the more classic early Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Some of the most important neurotoxins to avoid are pharmaceuticals, and when I meet elderly individuals who have preserved their mental clarity, many report having largely avoided pharmaceuticals throughout their lives.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em><\/p>\n<p><\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Some of the most common problematic medications for brain health include certain <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-blood-pressure-scam\" target=\"_blank\">high blood pressure medications<\/a> (because they <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-blood-pressure-scam\" target=\"_blank\">lower cerebral perfusion<\/a>), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-cholesterol-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">statins<\/a> (as they <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-cholesterol-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">inhibit the production of compounds essential for brain function<\/a>), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/stomach-acid-is-critical-for-health\" target=\"_blank\">acid reflux medications<\/a> (which <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/stomach-acid-is-critical-for-health\" target=\"_blank\">interfere with the absorption of vital brain nutrients<\/a> \u2014 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/stomach-acid-is-critical-for-health\" target=\"_blank\">making it critical for everyone to have adequate stomach acid<\/a>), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/why-are-antidepressants-so-harmful\" target=\"_blank\">antidepressants<\/a>, antipsychotics, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-they-dont-tell-you-about-anxiety\" target=\"_blank\">benzodiazepines<\/a>, antihistamines (since, like many sleeping pills, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/why-isnt-there-a-cure-for-insomnia\" target=\"_blank\">they block restorative sleep<\/a>), and anticholinergics (such as those prescribed for incontinence).<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 4: Vascular \u2014<\/strong> In this form, chronic restriction of cerebral blood flow from existing vascular diseases leads to gradual neuronal injury and cognitive decline. Type 4 often appears in the seventies or beyond and may overlap with other subtypes. It tends to affect processing speed, attention, and executive function rather than memory alone.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Rapid cognitive decline <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/we-now-have-proof-the-covid-vaccines\" target=\"_blank\">frequently followed COVID vaccination<\/a>, and significantly overlapped with this type.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>Type 5: Traumatic \u2014<\/strong> Severe head traumas or repeated concussions (e.g., in professional football players)<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref9\">9<\/span><\/sup> set off a cascade of chronic degenerative processes that cause cognitive and emotional dysfunction to appear years or decades after the injuries \u2014 making it critical to prevent these injuries and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">seek appropriate treatment when head traumas happen<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> There are a variety of causes of dementia, many of which are frequently (roughly half the time)<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref10\">10<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref11\">11<\/span><\/sup> misdiagnosed as Alzheimer\u2019s. In many cases, these respond to the same treatments which reverse Alzheimer\u2019s, but in other cases, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">require different treatments<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Healthy Fluid Circulation<\/h2>\n<p>Many practitioners I know who\u2019ve successfully treated dementia with a variety of methods (listed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) all concluded it resulted from impairments of blood flow to the brain and lymphatic or venous drainage from it. For example:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-makes-all-vaccines-so-dangerous\" target=\"_blank\">Zeta potential<\/a> provides the disperse force which keeps constituents within fluids from agglomerating and clogging the circulatory vessels (e.g., vaccines <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-makes-all-vaccines-so-dangerous\" target=\"_blank\">frequently trigger detectable microstrokes<\/a> by causing blood cells to clump together).<\/p>\n<p>In a myriad of illnesses, we find restoring the physiologic zeta potential (discussed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/how-to-improve-zeta-potential-and\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) is pivotal for restoring health \u2014 particularly those associated with aging, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-makes-all-vaccines-so-dangerous\" target=\"_blank\">as zeta potential worsens with age<\/a> (due to declining kidney function). In turn, one of the physicians who inspired my medical path did so because his practice revolved around <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/how-to-improve-zeta-potential-and\" target=\"_blank\">treating zeta potential<\/a> and he repeatedly achieved significant cognitive improvements for his aging patients.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Impaired zeta potential will also cause proteins (e.g., amyloids) <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-makes-all-vaccines-so-dangerous\" target=\"_blank\">to misfold and clump together<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>China recently developed a surgery (detailed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) to increase the lymphatic drainage from the brain. Due to its low cost, it is being rapidly adopted nationwide. In parallel, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">an American procedure<\/a> was developed to increase venous drainage from the head and reported to greatly improve multiple sclerosis along with other chronic neuroimmune disorders (which distant colleagues witnessed).<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> I have seen many other circulatory enhancing therapies (listed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) also improve cognitive decline and dementia.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>Furthermore, beyond blood being vital for neuronal survival, the proper clearance of waste products from the brain is as well. Unfortunately, due to how limited space is for the brain within the skull, robust lymphatic vessels do not exist, and instead, lymphatic drainage is created by astrocytes creating temporary lymphatic vessels around blood vessels during deep sleep.<\/p>\n<div class=\"center-img\">\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/ImageServer\/public\/2025\/November\/perivascular-space-and-blood-brain-barrier.jpg\" alt=\"perivascular space and blood-brain barrier\">\n<\/div>\n<p>This system, in turn, is highly vulnerable to disruption, and numerous studies have now linked impaired glymphatic drainage to dementia<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref12\">12<\/span><\/sup> (e.g., TBIs impair glymphatic drainage<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref13\">13<\/span><\/sup> and adequate glymphatic drainage is required to eliminate amyloid from the brain)<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref14\">14<\/span><\/sup> \u2014 which <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">likely inspired the Chinese surgical procedure for dementia<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Due to the fragility of this system, disruptions are quite consequential (e.g., a poor zeta potential thickens and slows the drainage of glymphatic fluids). For example, as glymphatic drainage only occurs during deep sleep, inadequate sleep has been extensively linked to dementia<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref15\">15<\/span><\/sup> (e.g., one study found sleep disruption increased dementia by 104%,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref16\">16<\/span><\/sup> another by 22% to 50%,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref17\">17<\/span><\/sup> and a third saw a 139% increase<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref18\">18<\/span><\/sup> \u2014 along with another finding that sleep disruption caused a 71% increase in mild cognitive impairment).<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref19\">19<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Likewise, disrupted sleep was recently shown to accelerate the accumulation of amyloid plaques,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref20\">20<\/span><\/sup> and in another study, to mitigate the cognitive impairment created by Alzheimer\u2019s plaques.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref21\">21<\/span><\/sup> Unfortunately, the pathologic proteins in Alzheimer\u2019s have been shown to directly disrupt restorative sleep<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref22\">22<\/span><\/sup> and to take away the ability to recognize one is suffering from impaired sleep<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref23\">23<\/span><\/sup> \u2014 demonstrating why it is so important to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/why-isnt-there-a-cure-for-insomnia\" target=\"_blank\">restore your healthy sleep<\/a> before the momentum of dementia has entrenched itself.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> Sleeping pills block restorative sleep, and have a variety of issues (e.g., they make users 2 to 5 times as likely to die<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref24\">24<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref25\">25<\/span><\/sup>). Regarding dementia, multiple studies have found that sleeping pills increase the risk of it by 17% to 84%.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref26\">26<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref27\">27<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref28\">28<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref29\">29<\/span><\/sup><\/em><\/p>\n<h2>The Life of Cells and Neuroplasticity<\/h2>\n<p>One of the things I continually marvel at about nature is not only the ability of a species to genetically adapt to its environment, but the inherent adaptability each organism has within its own lifespan to adapt to its own environment. Within the human body, there are many systems that are designed to change based on the needs of one\u2019s environment (e.g., this is why weight training creates larger muscles), and among the most adaptable is the nervous system.<\/p>\n<p>So, at any given moment, neural circuits that support certain activities are reinforced, while other circuits are pruned and eventually disabled, a process that allows the nervous system to adapt to the complex needs of its environment. At the same time, many complex neurological and psychiatric disorders arise from a momentum being established where dysfunctional neurological circuits perpetually reinforce themselves.<\/p>\n<p>For these disorders to be treated, momentum should instead be built around a healthy circuit (for those interested, this is the best book I have seen on the subject).<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref30\">30<\/span><\/sup> This momentum is a key reason why it is so important to have healthy thought patterns and regularly actively exercise your brain (another core component of programs for preventing Alzheimer\u2019s).<\/p>\n<p>If you do the opposite (e.g., watch TV all day), dysfunctional patterns can become established habits, while neurological damage occurs as parts of the brain you need but under utilize are pruned away.<\/p>\n<p>A key way the brain accomplishes this adaptability is by eliminating neurons that are no longer deemed essential. Bredesen\u2019s theory of Alzheimer\u2019s is that it results from the balance between preserving and eliminating neurons being shifted towards removing them,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref31\">31<\/span><\/sup> which inevitably will result in cognitive decline.<\/p>\n<p>Within Bredesen\u2019s model, the amyloid protein plays a key role in this process,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref32\">32<\/span><\/sup> as when it is initially formed as the amyloid precursor protein (APP), it can then be split into two or four parts. If it is divided into two parts, those parts protect the neurological function in the brain. In comparison, if it is divided into four parts, the neurological function of the brain is damaged, and brain cells are eliminated.<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, its splitting into four parts causes future APPs to be split into four parts as well (creating a downward spiral). As a result, Bredesen\u2019s approach focuses on regaining a healthy momentum towards the two-part splitting while also providing the signals cells within the body require to survive.<\/p>\n<h2>The Cell Danger Response<\/h2>\n<p>When cells are exposed to external stressors, they often enter <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-is-the-cell-danger-response\" target=\"_blank\">a primitive defensive metabolic cycle<\/a> where they partially or fully \u201cturn off\u201d (e.g., mitochondrial respiration and protein synthesis within the cell decline) to protect themselves. Many chronic diseases, in turn, result from cells being trapped in this degenerative cycle (which often leads to cell death) rather than exiting it and resuming their normal function. Likewise, many therapies in regenerative medicine work by removing cells from this frozen metabolic state.<\/p>\n<p>Because of this, many complex illnesses (e.g., COVID vaccine injuries, fibromyalgia, or autism) can only be treated if the underlying trigger for the cell danger response is removed. Then a regenerative therapy is provided which signals cells <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/what-is-the-cell-danger-response\" target=\"_blank\">to exit the CDR<\/a>. Similarly:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p><em>\u201cThe principle that blocking protein synthesis prevents long-term memory storage was discovered many years ago. With age, there is a marked decline of protein synthesis in the brain that correlates with defects in proper protein folding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins can activate the integrated stress response (ISR), an evolutionary conserved pathway that decreases protein synthesis. In this way, the ISR may have a causative role in age-related cognitive decline.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In turn, much as treatments for the CDR often facilitate dementia treatment, therapies that inhibit the ISR have been found to restore the structure and function of brain cells and improve a variety of age-related memory deficits.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref33\">33<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref34\">34<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>DMSO<\/h2>\n<p>Dimethyl sulfoxide has a variety of unique therapeutic properties that allow it to treat a variety of diseases (e.g., <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/dmso-could-save-millions-from-brain\" target=\"_blank\">it is miraculous for strokes and brain injuries<\/a>), and in the year since I began publicizing this forgotten therapy, I have received <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-remarkable-history-and-safety\" target=\"_blank\">thousands of remarkable reports<\/a> of it treating numerous \u201cincurable illnesses.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Much of this results from DMSO\u2019s ability to restore normal circulation, protect cells from lethal stressors, and revive shocked cells trapped in the CDR. As such, since the start of the series, in addition to receiving many reports from readers who saved themselves or a loved one from a disabling stroke with DMSO, many have also shared stories like this:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p><em>\u201cMy uncle\u2019s wife has dementia and has been unable to speak for over a year.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref35\">35<\/span><\/sup> My mom recently visited them and told them about DMSO. He began to give his wife DMSO orally. After two weeks she began to talk again.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Numerous studies (detailed <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>) have corroborated DMSO\u2019s ability to treat dementia. These include:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>When cerebral blood flow was permanently reduced in rats, one study found DMSO prevented the neuronal and memory loss that otherwise resulted,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref36\">36<\/span><\/sup> while another found DMSO given afterwards treated it.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref37\">37<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref38\">38<\/span><\/sup> Similar benefits have also been seen after Alzheimer\u2019s was induced by injecting toxins into the brain,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref39\">39<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref40\">40<\/span><\/sup> Likewise, in mice (or nematodes) engineered to develop Alzheimer\u2019s, DMSO has been repeatedly shown to prevent the expected neurological damage.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref41\">41<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref42\">42<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref43\">43<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>DMSO has also been shown<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref44\">44<\/span><\/sup> to prevent the neuronal damage from experimentally induced Parkinson\u2019s and preserve the cognitive function of mice bred to rapidly develop severe degeneration of the cerebellum and brainstem.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref45\">45<\/span>,<span data-hash=\"#ednref46\">46<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Note:<\/strong> IV DMSO is one of the few therapies I have come across which can halt Parkinson\u2019s. To some extent oral DMSO helps as well (e.g., see this reader\u2019s comment).<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref47\">47<\/span><\/sup><\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>DMSO has also been shown to treat scrapie (a neurodegenerative prion disease from abnormal protein aggregates) in hamsters,<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref48\">48<\/span><\/sup> to increase the activity of ALP the intracellular enzyme which eliminates cellular waste (including misfolded proteins),<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref49\">49<\/span><\/sup> and in a large number of studies, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/how-dmso-treats-incurable-autoimmune\" target=\"_blank\">to treat amyloidosis<\/a> (pathologic accumulations of pathologic proteins.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>In humans:<\/p>\n<div class=\"indent\">\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>18 patients with probable Alzheimer\u2019s after three months, DMSO caused a significant improvement in memory, concentration, communication, and orientation to time and space.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref50\">50<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>In 104 elderly adults with organic brain disease from the common causes (e.g., strokes, atherosclerosis, Parkinson\u2019s, or head injuries), DMSO greatly improved their psychic and somatic function.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref51\">51<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"bullet\">\u2022 <\/span>In 100 patients with cerebrovascular diseases CVD, many of whom were senile, over 50 days DMSO caused almost all to have a significant improvement in their CVD, along with significant improvements in mood, mobility, and speech.<sup><span data-hash=\"#ednref52\">52<\/span><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Wniosek<\/h2>\n<p>Medicine revolves around finding unique molecular targets for which disease specific treatments can be patented. Unfortunately, this model frequently fails in chronic illnesses, leading to grotesque situations like the one described here, where natural therapies, which can address the actual causes of devastating illnesses are sidelined to protect each disease\u2019s lucrative \u201ctreatment\u201d market.<\/p>\n<p>This needs to change, and for the first time in my lifetime, thanks to MAHA, the political will at last exists to begin addressing the real reasons why there continues to be so much chronic illness in our society. The opportunity to make cognitive decline no longer an inevitable aspect of aging is finally here \u2014 if we dare to seize it!<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Author\u2019s Note:<\/strong> This is an abridged version of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">a longer article<\/a> which discusses the actual causes and treatments for Alzheimer\u2019s disease and the cognitive decline which precedes it. That article, along with additional links and references, can be read <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/the-great-alzheimers-scam-and-the\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>. Additionally, a companion article on how DMSO treats neurological injuries (e.g., strokes, brain hemorrhages, traumatic brain injuries, spinal paralysis, and developmental delay) can be read <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/p\/dmso-could-save-millions-from-brain\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n<h2>A Note from Dr. Mercola About the Author<\/h2>\n<p>A Midwestern Doctor (AMD) is a board-certified physician from the Midwest and a longtime reader of Mercola.com. I appreciate AMD\u2019s exceptional insight on a wide range of topics and am grateful to share it. I also respect AMD\u2019s desire to remain anonymous since AMD is still on the front lines treating patients. To find more of AMD\u2019s work, be sure to check out <a href=\"https:\/\/www.midwesterndoctor.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">The Forgotten Side of Medicine<\/a> on Substack.<\/p>\n<p>&lt;!&#8211;<\/p>\n<h2>Test Your Knowledge with Today&#8217;s Quiz!<\/h2>\n<p>Take today\u2019s quiz to see how much you\u2019ve learned from <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/11\/06\/beta-blockers-heart-failure-treatment.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">yesterday\u2019s Mercola.com article<\/a>.<\/p>\n<div class=\"quiz-panel\">\n<div class=\"quiz-item\">\n<p class=\"title\"><span>What did recent research reveal about beta-blockers for heart attack patients?<\/span><\/p>\n<ul class=\"options\">\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>They prevent repeat heart attacks by improving long-term circulation and heart repair<\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>They reduce dizziness and fatigue by lowering stress on the heart after recovery<\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item correct\"><span>They provide no survival benefit for patients whose hearts still pump normally<\/span><br \/>\n<span class=\"explanation\"><\/p>\n<p>Beta-blockers gave no survival or recovery advantage for patients with normal heart function after a heart attack. <a href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2025\/11\/06\/beta-blockers-heart-failure-treatment.aspx\" target=\"_blank\">Learn more<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><\/span><\/li>\n<li class=\"option-item\"><span>They shorten recovery time by helping arteries stay open after hospital treatment<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p> &#8211;&gt;<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<\/p>\n<p>WA\u017bNY<\/p>\n<p>A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way<br \/>\nOur team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what&#8217;s changing \u2192<\/p>\n<p>Alzheimer\u2019s dementia is one of the most significant medical challenges our country faces (e.g., it places an incredible burden upon society, e.g., last year it was estimated to cost the United States 360 billion dollars).1 Yet, despite spending billions for research each year, cures remain elusive, something many believe results from the flawed belief that eliminating the amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer\u2019s will fix it. In turn, as I showed here:<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Decades of amyloid therapies have never produced a beneficial treatment.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 The newest \u201cbreakthrough\u201d amyloid-eliminating monoclonal antibodies, at best slightly slow the progression of Alzheimer\u2019s while simultaneously causing a host of side effects, including brain bleeding and swelling in over a quarter of recipients.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 The entire amyloid industry rests upon a fraudulent study no one wanted to retract due to how much was invested in the amyloid hypothesis.<\/p>\n<p>In short, the money behind this juggernaut has caused research into the real causes of Alzheimer\u2019s to be suppressed. For example, here I highlighted how coconut oil MCTs (safely) do more than any of the costly amyloid drugs \u2014 yet virtually no one knows this.2<\/p>\n<p>Dale Bredesen\u2019s Discovery<\/p>\n<p>Many are also unaware of a 2022 study that should have revolutionized the entire Alzheimer\u2019s field:3<\/p>\n<p>That protocol was based on Dale Bredesen\u2019s insightful realizations that:4<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Amyloid protein is a protective mechanism the brain uses to protect itself from stressors that endanger brain tissue \u2014 making attempts to treat Alzheimer\u2019s by eliminating it are doomed to fail.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 The brain is designed to be able to adapt to the needs of life, so it is always creating or pruning neural connections and brain cells. Alzheimer\u2019s results from the loss of signals that sustain brain cells and the dismantling of neural connections, outweighing the formation of new neural connections, a process that gradually compounds over the decades.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Rather than there being one type of Alzheimer\u2019s, there are actually multiple types that each require different treatment approaches.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Beyond the 2022 trial, which showed individually targeted therapies could shift the brain\u2019s momentum from neurological degeneration to regrowth,5 a 2018 report of 100 patients from numerous providers also showed it treated Alzheimer\u2019s,6 as did a 2024 case series of patients with remarkable results,7 and there are now neurologists around the country administering Bredesen\u2019s protocol with success.<\/p>\n<p>The 6 Types of Alzheimer\u2019s Disease<\/p>\n<p>As this understanding of Alzheimer\u2019s has produced tangible results, this suggests the causes of Alzheimer\u2019s that Bredesen identified indeed play a key role in the disease \u2014 particularly since many other datasets corroborate their contribution to Alzheimer\u2019s. They are as follows:<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 1: Inflammatory \u2014 This form is driven by excessive inflammation, often metabolic or infectious in nature. Chronic activation of the immune system \u2014 due to factors such as insulin resistance, a poor diet, a leaky gut, or latent infections \u2014 leads the brain to engage in protective downsizing by removing synapses and neurons that are less essential for immediate survival. It often presents with classic Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss and typically develops in the sixties to seventies.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 1.5: Glycotoxic \u2014 This subtype arises from insulin resistance and chronically elevated blood sugar. It leads to both inflammatory and trophic deficiencies, and is driven by glycotoxicity and the accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which impair cellular function and synaptic integrity. It typically appears in the late fifties to sixties.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Chronically elevated insulin promotes amyloid formation, as the enzyme the body uses to break down insulin is the same enzyme it uses to break down amyloid plaques.8<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 2: Atrophic \u2014 This type is caused by deficiencies in key nutrients, hormones, and other factors that provide trophic (supportive) signals to brain cells, which then triggers a similar downsizing mechanism seen in Type 1. Type 2 tends to emerge about a decade later than Type 1.<\/p>\n<p>Note: We find these nutritional deficiencies can result from poor circulation reducing existing nutrients reaching brain tissue, and hence often focus on improving circulation rather than extended supplementation.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 3: Toxic \u2014 This subtype results from exposure to toxic substances that directly damage neurons. Common culprits include biotoxins, chronic infections, heavy metals, and industrial or household chemicals. Causative infections (discussed further here) include Cytomegalovirus, Human Herpesvirus 1 or 6, Lyme disease, dental bacteria that can travel to the brain (e.g., P. gingivalis), and various fungal infections (as mold toxins are notorious for causing cognitive impairment at all ages).<\/p>\n<p>Type 3 uniquely causes widespread and often unpredictable neuronal death, occurs earlier in life \u2014 often between the forties and sixties \u2014 and is less strongly associated with genetic risk factors. Cognitive decline in this type is frequently accompanied by psychiatric symptoms, sensory changes, or executive dysfunction (e.g., difficulty with math, organization, executive tasks), rather than the more classic early Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Some of the most important neurotoxins to avoid are pharmaceuticals, and when I meet elderly individuals who have preserved their mental clarity, many report having largely avoided pharmaceuticals throughout their lives.<\/p>\n<p>Some of the most common problematic medications for brain health include certain high blood pressure medications (because they lower cerebral perfusion), statins (as they inhibit the production of compounds essential for brain function), acid reflux medications (which interfere with the absorption of vital brain nutrients \u2014 making it critical for everyone to have adequate stomach acid), antidepressants, antipsychotics, benzodiazepines, antihistamines (since, like many sleeping pills, they block restorative sleep), and anticholinergics (such as those prescribed for incontinence).<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 4: Vascular \u2014 In this form, chronic restriction of cerebral blood flow from existing vascular diseases leads to gradual neuronal injury and cognitive decline. Type 4 often appears in the seventies or beyond and may overlap with other subtypes. It tends to affect processing speed, attention, and executive function rather than memory alone.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Rapid cognitive decline frequently followed COVID vaccination, and significantly overlapped with this type.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Type 5: Traumatic \u2014 Severe head traumas or repeated concussions (e.g., in professional football players)9 set off a cascade of chronic degenerative processes that cause cognitive and emotional dysfunction to appear years or decades after the injuries \u2014 making it critical to prevent these injuries and seek appropriate treatment when head traumas happen.<\/p>\n<p>Note: There are a variety of causes of dementia, many of which are frequently (roughly half the time)10,11 misdiagnosed as Alzheimer\u2019s. In many cases, these respond to the same treatments which reverse Alzheimer\u2019s, but in other cases, require different treatments.<\/p>\n<p>Healthy Fluid Circulation<\/p>\n<p>Many practitioners I know who\u2019ve successfully treated dementia with a variety of methods (listed here) all concluded it resulted from impairments of blood flow to the brain and lymphatic or venous drainage from it. For example:<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 Zeta potential provides the disperse force which keeps constituents within fluids from agglomerating and clogging the circulatory vessels (e.g., vaccines frequently trigger detectable microstrokes by causing blood cells to clump together).<\/p>\n<p>In a myriad of illnesses, we find restoring the physiologic zeta potential (discussed here) is pivotal for restoring health \u2014 particularly those associated with aging, as zeta potential worsens with age (due to declining kidney function). In turn, one of the physicians who inspired my medical path did so because his practice revolved around treating zeta potential and he repeatedly achieved significant cognitive improvements for his aging patients.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Impaired zeta potential will also cause proteins (e.g., amyloids) to misfold and clump together.<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 China recently developed a surgery (detailed here) to increase the lymphatic drainage from the brain. Due to its low cost, it is being rapidly adopted nationwide. In parallel, an American procedure was developed to increase venous drainage from the head and reported to greatly improve multiple sclerosis along with other chronic neuroimmune disorders (which distant colleagues witnessed).<\/p>\n<p>Note: I have seen many other circulatory enhancing therapies (listed here) also improve cognitive decline and dementia.<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, beyond blood being vital for neuronal survival, the proper clearance of waste products from the brain is as well. Unfortunately, due to how limited space is for the brain within the skull, robust lymphatic vessels do not exist, and instead, lymphatic drainage is created by astrocytes creating temporary lymphatic vessels around blood vessels during deep sleep.<\/p>\n<p>This system, in turn, is highly vulnerable to disruption, and numerous studies have now linked impaired glymphatic drainage to dementia12 (e.g., TBIs impair glymphatic drainage13 and adequate glymphatic drainage is required to eliminate amyloid from the brain)14 \u2014 which likely inspired the Chinese surgical procedure for dementia.<\/p>\n<p>Due to the fragility of this system, disruptions are quite consequential (e.g., a poor zeta potential thickens and slows the drainage of glymphatic fluids). For example, as glymphatic drainage only occurs during deep sleep, inadequate sleep has been extensively linked to dementia15 (e.g., one study found sleep disruption increased dementia by 104%,16 another by 22% to 50%,17 and a third saw a 139% increase18 \u2014 along with another finding that sleep disruption caused a 71% increase in mild cognitive impairment).19<\/p>\n<p>Likewise, disrupted sleep was recently shown to accelerate the accumulation of amyloid plaques,20 and in another study, to mitigate the cognitive impairment created by Alzheimer\u2019s plaques.21 Unfortunately, the pathologic proteins in Alzheimer\u2019s have been shown to directly disrupt restorative sleep22 and to take away the ability to recognize one is suffering from impaired sleep23 \u2014 demonstrating why it is so important to restore your healthy sleep before the momentum of dementia has entrenched itself.<\/p>\n<p>Note: Sleeping pills block restorative sleep, and have a variety of issues (e.g., they make users 2 to 5 times as likely to die24,25). Regarding dementia, multiple studies have found that sleeping pills increase the risk of it by 17% to 84%.26,27,28,29<\/p>\n<p>The Life of Cells and Neuroplasticity<\/p>\n<p>One of the things I continually marvel at about nature is not only the ability of a species to genetically adapt to its environment, but the inherent adaptability each organism has within its own lifespan to adapt to its own environment. Within the human body, there are many systems that are designed to change based on the needs of one\u2019s environment (e.g., this is why weight training creates larger muscles), and among the most adaptable is the nervous system.<\/p>\n<p>So, at any given moment, neural circuits that support certain activities are reinforced, while other circuits are pruned and eventually disabled, a process that allows the nervous system to adapt to the complex needs of its environment. At the same time, many complex neurological and psychiatric disorders arise from a momentum being established where dysfunctional neurological circuits perpetually reinforce themselves.<\/p>\n<p>For these disorders to be treated, momentum should instead be built around a healthy circuit (for those interested, this is the best book I have seen on the subject).30 This momentum is a key reason why it is so important to have healthy thought patterns and regularly actively exercise your brain (another core component of programs for preventing Alzheimer\u2019s).<\/p>\n<p>If you do the opposite (e.g., watch TV all day), dysfunctional patterns can become established habits, while neurological damage occurs as parts of the brain you need but under utilize are pruned away.<\/p>\n<p>A key way the brain accomplishes this adaptability is by eliminating neurons that are no longer deemed essential. Bredesen\u2019s theory of Alzheimer\u2019s is that it results from the balance between preserving and eliminating neurons being shifted towards removing them,31 which inevitably will result in cognitive decline.<\/p>\n<p>Within Bredesen\u2019s model, the amyloid protein plays a key role in this process,32 as when it is initially formed as the amyloid precursor protein (APP), it can then be split into two or four parts. If it is divided into two parts, those parts protect the neurological function in the brain. In comparison, if it is divided into four parts, the neurological function of the brain is damaged, and brain cells are eliminated.<\/p>\n<p>Interestingly, its splitting into four parts causes future APPs to be split into four parts as well (creating a downward spiral). As a result, Bredesen\u2019s approach focuses on regaining a healthy momentum towards the two-part splitting while also providing the signals cells within the body require to survive.<\/p>\n<p>The Cell Danger Response<\/p>\n<p>When cells are exposed to external stressors, they often enter a primitive defensive metabolic cycle where they partially or fully \u201cturn off\u201d (e.g., mitochondrial respiration and protein synthesis within the cell decline) to protect themselves. Many chronic diseases, in turn, result from cells being trapped in this degenerative cycle (which often leads to cell death) rather than exiting it and resuming their normal function. Likewise, many therapies in regenerative medicine work by removing cells from this frozen metabolic state.<\/p>\n<p>Because of this, many complex illnesses (e.g., COVID vaccine injuries, fibromyalgia, or autism) can only be treated if the underlying trigger for the cell danger response is removed. Then a regenerative therapy is provided which signals cells to exit the CDR. Similarly:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe principle that blocking protein synthesis prevents long-term memory storage was discovered many years ago. With age, there is a marked decline of protein synthesis in the brain that correlates with defects in proper protein folding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins can activate the integrated stress response (ISR), an evolutionary conserved pathway that decreases protein synthesis. In this way, the ISR may have a causative role in age-related cognitive decline.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In turn, much as treatments for the CDR often facilitate dementia treatment, therapies that inhibit the ISR have been found to restore the structure and function of brain cells and improve a variety of age-related memory deficits.33,34<\/p>\n<p>DMSO<\/p>\n<p>Dimethyl sulfoxide has a variety of unique therapeutic properties that allow it to treat a variety of diseases (e.g., it is miraculous for strokes and brain injuries), and in the year since I began publicizing this forgotten therapy, I have received thousands of remarkable reports of it treating numerous \u201cincurable illnesses.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Much of this results from DMSO\u2019s ability to restore normal circulation, protect cells from lethal stressors, and revive shocked cells trapped in the CDR. As such, since the start of the series, in addition to receiving many reports from readers who saved themselves or a loved one from a disabling stroke with DMSO, many have also shared stories like this:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cMy uncle\u2019s wife has dementia and has been unable to speak for over a year.35 My mom recently visited them and told them about DMSO. He began to give his wife DMSO orally. After two weeks she began to talk again.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Numerous studies (detailed here) have corroborated DMSO\u2019s ability to treat dementia. These include:<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 When cerebral blood flow was permanently reduced in rats, one study found DMSO prevented the neuronal and memory loss that otherwise resulted,36 while another found DMSO given afterwards treated it.37,38 Similar benefits have also been seen after Alzheimer\u2019s was induced by injecting toxins into the brain,39,40 Likewise, in mice (or nematodes) engineered to develop Alzheimer\u2019s, DMSO has been repeatedly shown to prevent the expected neurological damage.41,42,43<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 DMSO has also been shown44 to prevent the neuronal damage from experimentally induced Parkinson\u2019s and preserve the cognitive function of mice bred to rapidly develop severe degeneration of the cerebellum and brainstem.45,46<\/p>\n<p>Note: IV DMSO is one of the few therapies I have come across which can halt Parkinson\u2019s. To some extent oral DMSO helps as well (e.g., see this reader\u2019s comment).47<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 DMSO has also been shown to treat scrapie (a neurodegenerative prion disease from abnormal protein aggregates) in hamsters,48 to increase the activity of ALP the intracellular enzyme which eliminates cellular waste (including misfolded proteins),49 and in a large number of studies, to treat amyloidosis (pathologic accumulations of pathologic proteins.<\/p>\n<p>In humans:<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 18 patients with probable Alzheimer\u2019s after three months, DMSO caused a significant improvement in memory, concentration, communication, and orientation to time and space.50<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 In 104 elderly adults with organic brain disease from the common causes (e.g., strokes, atherosclerosis, Parkinson\u2019s, or head injuries), DMSO greatly improved their psychic and somatic function.51<\/p>\n<p>\u2022 In 100 patients with cerebrovascular diseases CVD, many of whom were senile, over 50 days DMSO caused almost all to have a significant improvement in their CVD, along with significant improvements in mood, mobility, and speech.52<\/p>\n<p>Wniosek<\/p>\n<p>Medicine revolves around finding unique molecular targets for which disease specific treatments can be patented. Unfortunately, this model frequently fails in chronic illnesses, leading to grotesque situations like the one described here, where natural therapies, which can address the actual causes of devastating illnesses are sidelined to protect each disease\u2019s lucrative \u201ctreatment\u201d market.<\/p>\n<p>This needs to change, and for the first time in my lifetime, thanks to MAHA, the political will at last exists to begin addressing the real reasons why there continues to be so much chronic illness in our society. The opportunity to make cognitive decline no longer an inevitable aspect of aging is finally here \u2014 if we dare to seize it!<\/p>\n<p>Author\u2019s Note: This is an abridged version of a longer article which discusses the actual causes and treatments for Alzheimer\u2019s disease and the cognitive decline which precedes it. That article, along with additional links and references, can be read here. Additionally, a companion article on how DMSO treats neurological injuries (e.g., strokes, brain hemorrhages, traumatic brain injuries, spinal paralysis, and developmental delay) can be read here.<\/p>\n<p>A Note from Dr. Mercola About the Author<\/p>\n<p>A Midwestern Doctor (AMD) is a board-certified physician from the Midwest and a longtime reader of Mercola.com. I appreciate AMD\u2019s exceptional insight on a wide range of topics and am grateful to share it. I also respect AMD\u2019s desire to remain anonymous since AMD is still on the front lines treating patients. To find more of AMD\u2019s work, be sure to check out The Forgotten Side of Medicine on Substack.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"seo_booster_metabox":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[3562,3892],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-163961","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-baptism-confirmation","category-dr-mercola-daily-news"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Reversing Alzheimer&#039;s \u2014 The Forgotten Causes and Cures Big Pharma Buried - Watchman News<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"pl_PL\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Reversing Alzheimer&#039;s \u2014 The Forgotten Causes and Cures Big Pharma Buried - Watchman News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way   IMPORTANT  A New Series of Health Insights Is on the\u00a0Way Our team has been working behind the scenes to prepare new research and practical health strategies for our readers. While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what&#039;s changing \u2192            Alzheimer\u2019s dementia is one of the most significant medical challenges our country faces (e.g., it places an incredible burden upon society, e.g., last year it was estimated to cost the United States 360 billion dollars).1 Yet, despite spending billions for research each year, cures remain elusive, something many believe results from the flawed belief that eliminating the amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer\u2019s will fix it. In turn, as I showed here:    \u2022 Decades of amyloid therapies have never produced a beneficial treatment.  \u2022 The newest \u201cbreakthrough\u201d amyloid-eliminating monoclonal antibodies, at best slightly slow the progression of Alzheimer\u2019s while simultaneously causing a host of side effects, including brain bleeding and swelling in over a quarter of recipients.  \u2022 The entire amyloid industry rests upon a fraudulent study no one wanted to retract due to how much was invested in the amyloid hypothesis.   In short, the money behind this juggernaut has caused research into the real causes of Alzheimer\u2019s to be suppressed. For example, here I highlighted how coconut oil MCTs (safely) do more than any of the costly amyloid drugs \u2014 yet virtually no one knows this.2          Dale Bredesen\u2019s Discovery  Many are also unaware of a 2022 study that should have revolutionized the entire Alzheimer\u2019s field:3      That protocol was based on Dale Bredesen\u2019s insightful realizations that:4   \u2022 Amyloid protein is a protective mechanism the brain uses to protect itself from stressors that endanger brain tissue \u2014 making attempts to treat Alzheimer\u2019s by eliminating it are doomed to fail.  \u2022 The brain is designed to be able to adapt to the needs of life, so it is always creating or pruning neural connections and brain cells. Alzheimer\u2019s results from the loss of signals that sustain brain cells and the dismantling of neural connections, outweighing the formation of new neural connections, a process that gradually compounds over the decades.  \u2022 Rather than there being one type of Alzheimer\u2019s, there are actually multiple types that each require different treatment approaches.   Note: Beyond the 2022 trial, which showed individually targeted therapies could shift the brain\u2019s momentum from neurological degeneration to regrowth,5 a 2018 report of 100 patients from numerous providers also showed it treated Alzheimer\u2019s,6 as did a 2024 case series of patients with remarkable results,7 and there are now neurologists around the country administering Bredesen\u2019s protocol with success.   The 6 Types of Alzheimer\u2019s Disease  As this understanding of Alzheimer\u2019s has produced tangible results, this suggests the causes of Alzheimer\u2019s that Bredesen identified indeed play a key role in the disease \u2014 particularly since many other datasets corroborate their contribution to Alzheimer\u2019s. They are as follows:   \u2022 Type 1: Inflammatory \u2014 This form is driven by excessive inflammation, often metabolic or infectious in nature. Chronic activation of the immune system \u2014 due to factors such as insulin resistance, a poor diet, a leaky gut, or latent infections \u2014 leads the brain to engage in protective downsizing by removing synapses and neurons that are less essential for immediate survival. It often presents with classic Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss and typically develops in the sixties to seventies.  \u2022 Type 1.5: Glycotoxic \u2014 This subtype arises from insulin resistance and chronically elevated blood sugar. It leads to both inflammatory and trophic deficiencies, and is driven by glycotoxicity and the accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which impair cellular function and synaptic integrity. It typically appears in the late fifties to sixties.  Note: Chronically elevated insulin promotes amyloid formation, as the enzyme the body uses to break down insulin is the same enzyme it uses to break down amyloid plaques.8  \u2022 Type 2: Atrophic \u2014 This type is caused by deficiencies in key nutrients, hormones, and other factors that provide trophic (supportive) signals to brain cells, which then triggers a similar downsizing mechanism seen in Type 1. Type 2 tends to emerge about a decade later than Type 1.  Note: We find these nutritional deficiencies can result from poor circulation reducing existing nutrients reaching brain tissue, and hence often focus on improving circulation rather than extended supplementation.  \u2022 Type 3: Toxic \u2014 This subtype results from exposure to toxic substances that directly damage neurons. Common culprits include biotoxins, chronic infections, heavy metals, and industrial or household chemicals. Causative infections (discussed further here) include Cytomegalovirus, Human Herpesvirus 1 or 6, Lyme disease, dental bacteria that can travel to the brain (e.g., P. gingivalis), and various fungal infections (as mold toxins are notorious for causing cognitive impairment at all ages).  Type 3 uniquely causes widespread and often unpredictable neuronal death, occurs earlier in life \u2014 often between the forties and sixties \u2014 and is less strongly associated with genetic risk factors. Cognitive decline in this type is frequently accompanied by psychiatric symptoms, sensory changes, or executive dysfunction (e.g., difficulty with math, organization, executive tasks), rather than the more classic early Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss.  Note: Some of the most important neurotoxins to avoid are pharmaceuticals, and when I meet elderly individuals who have preserved their mental clarity, many report having largely avoided pharmaceuticals throughout their lives.  Some of the most common problematic medications for brain health include certain high blood pressure medications (because they lower cerebral perfusion), statins (as they inhibit the production of compounds essential for brain function), acid reflux medications (which interfere with the absorption of vital brain nutrients \u2014 making it critical for everyone to have adequate stomach acid), antidepressants, antipsychotics, benzodiazepines, antihistamines (since, like many sleeping pills, they block restorative sleep), and anticholinergics (such as those prescribed for incontinence).  \u2022 Type 4: Vascular \u2014 In this form, chronic restriction of cerebral blood flow from existing vascular diseases leads to gradual neuronal injury and cognitive decline. Type 4 often appears in the seventies or beyond and may overlap with other subtypes. It tends to affect processing speed, attention, and executive function rather than memory alone.  Note: Rapid cognitive decline frequently followed COVID vaccination, and significantly overlapped with this type.  \u2022 Type 5: Traumatic \u2014 Severe head traumas or repeated concussions (e.g., in professional football players)9 set off a cascade of chronic degenerative processes that cause cognitive and emotional dysfunction to appear years or decades after the injuries \u2014 making it critical to prevent these injuries and seek appropriate treatment when head traumas happen.  Note: There are a variety of causes of dementia, many of which are frequently (roughly half the time)10,11 misdiagnosed as Alzheimer\u2019s. In many cases, these respond to the same treatments which reverse Alzheimer\u2019s, but in other cases, require different treatments.    Healthy Fluid Circulation  Many practitioners I know who\u2019ve successfully treated dementia with a variety of methods (listed here) all concluded it resulted from impairments of blood flow to the brain and lymphatic or venous drainage from it. For example:   \u2022 Zeta potential provides the disperse force which keeps constituents within fluids from agglomerating and clogging the circulatory vessels (e.g., vaccines frequently trigger detectable microstrokes by causing blood cells to clump together).  In a myriad of illnesses, we find restoring the physiologic zeta potential (discussed here) is pivotal for restoring health \u2014 particularly those associated with aging, as zeta potential worsens with age (due to declining kidney function). In turn, one of the physicians who inspired my medical path did so because his practice revolved around treating zeta potential and he repeatedly achieved significant cognitive improvements for his aging patients.  Note: Impaired zeta potential will also cause proteins (e.g., amyloids) to misfold and clump together.  \u2022 China recently developed a surgery (detailed here) to increase the lymphatic drainage from the brain. Due to its low cost, it is being rapidly adopted nationwide. In parallel, an American procedure was developed to increase venous drainage from the head and reported to greatly improve multiple sclerosis along with other chronic neuroimmune disorders (which distant colleagues witnessed).  Note: I have seen many other circulatory enhancing therapies (listed here) also improve cognitive decline and dementia.    Furthermore, beyond blood being vital for neuronal survival, the proper clearance of waste products from the brain is as well. Unfortunately, due to how limited space is for the brain within the skull, robust lymphatic vessels do not exist, and instead, lymphatic drainage is created by astrocytes creating temporary lymphatic vessels around blood vessels during deep sleep.      This system, in turn, is highly vulnerable to disruption, and numerous studies have now linked impaired glymphatic drainage to dementia12 (e.g., TBIs impair glymphatic drainage13 and adequate glymphatic drainage is required to eliminate amyloid from the brain)14 \u2014 which likely inspired the Chinese surgical procedure for dementia.  Due to the fragility of this system, disruptions are quite consequential (e.g., a poor zeta potential thickens and slows the drainage of glymphatic fluids). For example, as glymphatic drainage only occurs during deep sleep, inadequate sleep has been extensively linked to dementia15 (e.g., one study found sleep disruption increased dementia by 104%,16 another by 22% to 50%,17 and a third saw a 139% increase18 \u2014 along with another finding that sleep disruption caused a 71% increase in mild cognitive impairment).19  Likewise, disrupted sleep was recently shown to accelerate the accumulation of amyloid plaques,20 and in another study, to mitigate the cognitive impairment created by Alzheimer\u2019s plaques.21 Unfortunately, the pathologic proteins in Alzheimer\u2019s have been shown to directly disrupt restorative sleep22 and to take away the ability to recognize one is suffering from impaired sleep23 \u2014 demonstrating why it is so important to restore your healthy sleep before the momentum of dementia has entrenched itself.  Note: Sleeping pills block restorative sleep, and have a variety of issues (e.g., they make users 2 to 5 times as likely to die24,25). Regarding dementia, multiple studies have found that sleeping pills increase the risk of it by 17% to 84%.26,27,28,29   The Life of Cells and Neuroplasticity  One of the things I continually marvel at about nature is not only the ability of a species to genetically adapt to its environment, but the inherent adaptability each organism has within its own lifespan to adapt to its own environment. Within the human body, there are many systems that are designed to change based on the needs of one\u2019s environment (e.g., this is why weight training creates larger muscles), and among the most adaptable is the nervous system.  So, at any given moment, neural circuits that support certain activities are reinforced, while other circuits are pruned and eventually disabled, a process that allows the nervous system to adapt to the complex needs of its environment. At the same time, many complex neurological and psychiatric disorders arise from a momentum being established where dysfunctional neurological circuits perpetually reinforce themselves.  For these disorders to be treated, momentum should instead be built around a healthy circuit (for those interested, this is the best book I have seen on the subject).30 This momentum is a key reason why it is so important to have healthy thought patterns and regularly actively exercise your brain (another core component of programs for preventing Alzheimer\u2019s).  If you do the opposite (e.g., watch TV all day), dysfunctional patterns can become established habits, while neurological damage occurs as parts of the brain you need but under utilize are pruned away.  A key way the brain accomplishes this adaptability is by eliminating neurons that are no longer deemed essential. Bredesen\u2019s theory of Alzheimer\u2019s is that it results from the balance between preserving and eliminating neurons being shifted towards removing them,31 which inevitably will result in cognitive decline.  Within Bredesen\u2019s model, the amyloid protein plays a key role in this process,32 as when it is initially formed as the amyloid precursor protein (APP), it can then be split into two or four parts. If it is divided into two parts, those parts protect the neurological function in the brain. In comparison, if it is divided into four parts, the neurological function of the brain is damaged, and brain cells are eliminated.  Interestingly, its splitting into four parts causes future APPs to be split into four parts as well (creating a downward spiral). As a result, Bredesen\u2019s approach focuses on regaining a healthy momentum towards the two-part splitting while also providing the signals cells within the body require to survive.   The Cell Danger Response  When cells are exposed to external stressors, they often enter a primitive defensive metabolic cycle where they partially or fully \u201cturn off\u201d (e.g., mitochondrial respiration and protein synthesis within the cell decline) to protect themselves. Many chronic diseases, in turn, result from cells being trapped in this degenerative cycle (which often leads to cell death) rather than exiting it and resuming their normal function. Likewise, many therapies in regenerative medicine work by removing cells from this frozen metabolic state.  Because of this, many complex illnesses (e.g., COVID vaccine injuries, fibromyalgia, or autism) can only be treated if the underlying trigger for the cell danger response is removed. Then a regenerative therapy is provided which signals cells to exit the CDR. Similarly:  \u201cThe principle that blocking protein synthesis prevents long-term memory storage was discovered many years ago. With age, there is a marked decline of protein synthesis in the brain that correlates with defects in proper protein folding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins can activate the integrated stress response (ISR), an evolutionary conserved pathway that decreases protein synthesis. In this way, the ISR may have a causative role in age-related cognitive decline.\u201d  In turn, much as treatments for the CDR often facilitate dementia treatment, therapies that inhibit the ISR have been found to restore the structure and function of brain cells and improve a variety of age-related memory deficits.33,34   DMSO  Dimethyl sulfoxide has a variety of unique therapeutic properties that allow it to treat a variety of diseases (e.g., it is miraculous for strokes and brain injuries), and in the year since I began publicizing this forgotten therapy, I have received thousands of remarkable reports of it treating numerous \u201cincurable illnesses.\u201d  Much of this results from DMSO\u2019s ability to restore normal circulation, protect cells from lethal stressors, and revive shocked cells trapped in the CDR. As such, since the start of the series, in addition to receiving many reports from readers who saved themselves or a loved one from a disabling stroke with DMSO, many have also shared stories like this:  \u201cMy uncle\u2019s wife has dementia and has been unable to speak for over a year.35 My mom recently visited them and told them about DMSO. He began to give his wife DMSO orally. After two weeks she began to talk again.\u201d  Numerous studies (detailed here) have corroborated DMSO\u2019s ability to treat dementia. These include:   \u2022 When cerebral blood flow was permanently reduced in rats, one study found DMSO prevented the neuronal and memory loss that otherwise resulted,36 while another found DMSO given afterwards treated it.37,38 Similar benefits have also been seen after Alzheimer\u2019s was induced by injecting toxins into the brain,39,40 Likewise, in mice (or nematodes) engineered to develop Alzheimer\u2019s, DMSO has been repeatedly shown to prevent the expected neurological damage.41,42,43  \u2022 DMSO has also been shown44 to prevent the neuronal damage from experimentally induced Parkinson\u2019s and preserve the cognitive function of mice bred to rapidly develop severe degeneration of the cerebellum and brainstem.45,46  Note: IV DMSO is one of the few therapies I have come across which can halt Parkinson\u2019s. To some extent oral DMSO helps as well (e.g., see this reader\u2019s comment).47  \u2022 DMSO has also been shown to treat scrapie (a neurodegenerative prion disease from abnormal protein aggregates) in hamsters,48 to increase the activity of ALP the intracellular enzyme which eliminates cellular waste (including misfolded proteins),49 and in a large number of studies, to treat amyloidosis (pathologic accumulations of pathologic proteins.   In humans:   \u2022 18 patients with probable Alzheimer\u2019s after three months, DMSO caused a significant improvement in memory, concentration, communication, and orientation to time and space.50  \u2022 In 104 elderly adults with organic brain disease from the common causes (e.g., strokes, atherosclerosis, Parkinson\u2019s, or head injuries), DMSO greatly improved their psychic and somatic function.51  \u2022 In 100 patients with cerebrovascular diseases CVD, many of whom were senile, over 50 days DMSO caused almost all to have a significant improvement in their CVD, along with significant improvements in mood, mobility, and speech.52    Conclusion  Medicine revolves around finding unique molecular targets for which disease specific treatments can be patented. Unfortunately, this model frequently fails in chronic illnesses, leading to grotesque situations like the one described here, where natural therapies, which can address the actual causes of devastating illnesses are sidelined to protect each disease\u2019s lucrative \u201ctreatment\u201d market.  This needs to change, and for the first time in my lifetime, thanks to MAHA, the political will at last exists to begin addressing the real reasons why there continues to be so much chronic illness in our society. The opportunity to make cognitive decline no longer an inevitable aspect of aging is finally here \u2014 if we dare to seize it!  Author\u2019s Note: This is an abridged version of a longer article which discusses the actual causes and treatments for Alzheimer\u2019s disease and the cognitive decline which precedes it. That article, along with additional links and references, can be read here. Additionally, a companion article on how DMSO treats neurological injuries (e.g., strokes, brain hemorrhages, traumatic brain injuries, spinal paralysis, and developmental delay) can be read here.   A Note from Dr. Mercola About the Author  A Midwestern Doctor (AMD) is a board-certified physician from the Midwest and a longtime reader of Mercola.com. I appreciate AMD\u2019s exceptional insight on a wide range of topics and am grateful to share it. I also respect AMD\u2019s desire to remain anonymous since AMD is still on the front lines treating patients. To find more of AMD\u2019s work, be sure to check out The Forgotten Side of Medicine on Substack.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Watchman News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2026-03-29T00:00:00+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2026-03-29T05:43:22+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"Admin\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Napisane przez\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"Admin\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Szacowany czas czytania\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"16 minut\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"Admin\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/#\/schema\/person\/3f4506c6002f5893ba45478a4540739f\"},\"headline\":\"Reversing Alzheimer&#8217;s \u2014 The Forgotten Causes and Cures Big Pharma Buried\",\"datePublished\":\"2026-03-29T00:00:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2026-03-29T05:43:22+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/\"},\"wordCount\":3113,\"commentCount\":0,\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png\",\"articleSection\":[\"Baptism &amp; 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While we finish preparing what\u2019s coming next, we invite you to explore one of the most-read articles from our library below. See exactly what's changing \u2192            Alzheimer\u2019s dementia is one of the most significant medical challenges our country faces (e.g., it places an incredible burden upon society, e.g., last year it was estimated to cost the United States 360 billion dollars).1 Yet, despite spending billions for research each year, cures remain elusive, something many believe results from the flawed belief that eliminating the amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer\u2019s will fix it. In turn, as I showed here:    \u2022 Decades of amyloid therapies have never produced a beneficial treatment.  \u2022 The newest \u201cbreakthrough\u201d amyloid-eliminating monoclonal antibodies, at best slightly slow the progression of Alzheimer\u2019s while simultaneously causing a host of side effects, including brain bleeding and swelling in over a quarter of recipients.  \u2022 The entire amyloid industry rests upon a fraudulent study no one wanted to retract due to how much was invested in the amyloid hypothesis.   In short, the money behind this juggernaut has caused research into the real causes of Alzheimer\u2019s to be suppressed. For example, here I highlighted how coconut oil MCTs (safely) do more than any of the costly amyloid drugs \u2014 yet virtually no one knows this.2          Dale Bredesen\u2019s Discovery  Many are also unaware of a 2022 study that should have revolutionized the entire Alzheimer\u2019s field:3      That protocol was based on Dale Bredesen\u2019s insightful realizations that:4   \u2022 Amyloid protein is a protective mechanism the brain uses to protect itself from stressors that endanger brain tissue \u2014 making attempts to treat Alzheimer\u2019s by eliminating it are doomed to fail.  \u2022 The brain is designed to be able to adapt to the needs of life, so it is always creating or pruning neural connections and brain cells. Alzheimer\u2019s results from the loss of signals that sustain brain cells and the dismantling of neural connections, outweighing the formation of new neural connections, a process that gradually compounds over the decades.  \u2022 Rather than there being one type of Alzheimer\u2019s, there are actually multiple types that each require different treatment approaches.   Note: Beyond the 2022 trial, which showed individually targeted therapies could shift the brain\u2019s momentum from neurological degeneration to regrowth,5 a 2018 report of 100 patients from numerous providers also showed it treated Alzheimer\u2019s,6 as did a 2024 case series of patients with remarkable results,7 and there are now neurologists around the country administering Bredesen\u2019s protocol with success.   The 6 Types of Alzheimer\u2019s Disease  As this understanding of Alzheimer\u2019s has produced tangible results, this suggests the causes of Alzheimer\u2019s that Bredesen identified indeed play a key role in the disease \u2014 particularly since many other datasets corroborate their contribution to Alzheimer\u2019s. They are as follows:   \u2022 Type 1: Inflammatory \u2014 This form is driven by excessive inflammation, often metabolic or infectious in nature. Chronic activation of the immune system \u2014 due to factors such as insulin resistance, a poor diet, a leaky gut, or latent infections \u2014 leads the brain to engage in protective downsizing by removing synapses and neurons that are less essential for immediate survival. It often presents with classic Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss and typically develops in the sixties to seventies.  \u2022 Type 1.5: Glycotoxic \u2014 This subtype arises from insulin resistance and chronically elevated blood sugar. It leads to both inflammatory and trophic deficiencies, and is driven by glycotoxicity and the accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which impair cellular function and synaptic integrity. It typically appears in the late fifties to sixties.  Note: Chronically elevated insulin promotes amyloid formation, as the enzyme the body uses to break down insulin is the same enzyme it uses to break down amyloid plaques.8  \u2022 Type 2: Atrophic \u2014 This type is caused by deficiencies in key nutrients, hormones, and other factors that provide trophic (supportive) signals to brain cells, which then triggers a similar downsizing mechanism seen in Type 1. Type 2 tends to emerge about a decade later than Type 1.  Note: We find these nutritional deficiencies can result from poor circulation reducing existing nutrients reaching brain tissue, and hence often focus on improving circulation rather than extended supplementation.  \u2022 Type 3: Toxic \u2014 This subtype results from exposure to toxic substances that directly damage neurons. Common culprits include biotoxins, chronic infections, heavy metals, and industrial or household chemicals. Causative infections (discussed further here) include Cytomegalovirus, Human Herpesvirus 1 or 6, Lyme disease, dental bacteria that can travel to the brain (e.g., P. gingivalis), and various fungal infections (as mold toxins are notorious for causing cognitive impairment at all ages).  Type 3 uniquely causes widespread and often unpredictable neuronal death, occurs earlier in life \u2014 often between the forties and sixties \u2014 and is less strongly associated with genetic risk factors. Cognitive decline in this type is frequently accompanied by psychiatric symptoms, sensory changes, or executive dysfunction (e.g., difficulty with math, organization, executive tasks), rather than the more classic early Alzheimer\u2019s memory loss.  Note: Some of the most important neurotoxins to avoid are pharmaceuticals, and when I meet elderly individuals who have preserved their mental clarity, many report having largely avoided pharmaceuticals throughout their lives.  Some of the most common problematic medications for brain health include certain high blood pressure medications (because they lower cerebral perfusion), statins (as they inhibit the production of compounds essential for brain function), acid reflux medications (which interfere with the absorption of vital brain nutrients \u2014 making it critical for everyone to have adequate stomach acid), antidepressants, antipsychotics, benzodiazepines, antihistamines (since, like many sleeping pills, they block restorative sleep), and anticholinergics (such as those prescribed for incontinence).  \u2022 Type 4: Vascular \u2014 In this form, chronic restriction of cerebral blood flow from existing vascular diseases leads to gradual neuronal injury and cognitive decline. Type 4 often appears in the seventies or beyond and may overlap with other subtypes. It tends to affect processing speed, attention, and executive function rather than memory alone.  Note: Rapid cognitive decline frequently followed COVID vaccination, and significantly overlapped with this type.  \u2022 Type 5: Traumatic \u2014 Severe head traumas or repeated concussions (e.g., in professional football players)9 set off a cascade of chronic degenerative processes that cause cognitive and emotional dysfunction to appear years or decades after the injuries \u2014 making it critical to prevent these injuries and seek appropriate treatment when head traumas happen.  Note: There are a variety of causes of dementia, many of which are frequently (roughly half the time)10,11 misdiagnosed as Alzheimer\u2019s. In many cases, these respond to the same treatments which reverse Alzheimer\u2019s, but in other cases, require different treatments.    Healthy Fluid Circulation  Many practitioners I know who\u2019ve successfully treated dementia with a variety of methods (listed here) all concluded it resulted from impairments of blood flow to the brain and lymphatic or venous drainage from it. For example:   \u2022 Zeta potential provides the disperse force which keeps constituents within fluids from agglomerating and clogging the circulatory vessels (e.g., vaccines frequently trigger detectable microstrokes by causing blood cells to clump together).  In a myriad of illnesses, we find restoring the physiologic zeta potential (discussed here) is pivotal for restoring health \u2014 particularly those associated with aging, as zeta potential worsens with age (due to declining kidney function). In turn, one of the physicians who inspired my medical path did so because his practice revolved around treating zeta potential and he repeatedly achieved significant cognitive improvements for his aging patients.  Note: Impaired zeta potential will also cause proteins (e.g., amyloids) to misfold and clump together.  \u2022 China recently developed a surgery (detailed here) to increase the lymphatic drainage from the brain. Due to its low cost, it is being rapidly adopted nationwide. In parallel, an American procedure was developed to increase venous drainage from the head and reported to greatly improve multiple sclerosis along with other chronic neuroimmune disorders (which distant colleagues witnessed).  Note: I have seen many other circulatory enhancing therapies (listed here) also improve cognitive decline and dementia.    Furthermore, beyond blood being vital for neuronal survival, the proper clearance of waste products from the brain is as well. Unfortunately, due to how limited space is for the brain within the skull, robust lymphatic vessels do not exist, and instead, lymphatic drainage is created by astrocytes creating temporary lymphatic vessels around blood vessels during deep sleep.      This system, in turn, is highly vulnerable to disruption, and numerous studies have now linked impaired glymphatic drainage to dementia12 (e.g., TBIs impair glymphatic drainage13 and adequate glymphatic drainage is required to eliminate amyloid from the brain)14 \u2014 which likely inspired the Chinese surgical procedure for dementia.  Due to the fragility of this system, disruptions are quite consequential (e.g., a poor zeta potential thickens and slows the drainage of glymphatic fluids). For example, as glymphatic drainage only occurs during deep sleep, inadequate sleep has been extensively linked to dementia15 (e.g., one study found sleep disruption increased dementia by 104%,16 another by 22% to 50%,17 and a third saw a 139% increase18 \u2014 along with another finding that sleep disruption caused a 71% increase in mild cognitive impairment).19  Likewise, disrupted sleep was recently shown to accelerate the accumulation of amyloid plaques,20 and in another study, to mitigate the cognitive impairment created by Alzheimer\u2019s plaques.21 Unfortunately, the pathologic proteins in Alzheimer\u2019s have been shown to directly disrupt restorative sleep22 and to take away the ability to recognize one is suffering from impaired sleep23 \u2014 demonstrating why it is so important to restore your healthy sleep before the momentum of dementia has entrenched itself.  Note: Sleeping pills block restorative sleep, and have a variety of issues (e.g., they make users 2 to 5 times as likely to die24,25). Regarding dementia, multiple studies have found that sleeping pills increase the risk of it by 17% to 84%.26,27,28,29   The Life of Cells and Neuroplasticity  One of the things I continually marvel at about nature is not only the ability of a species to genetically adapt to its environment, but the inherent adaptability each organism has within its own lifespan to adapt to its own environment. Within the human body, there are many systems that are designed to change based on the needs of one\u2019s environment (e.g., this is why weight training creates larger muscles), and among the most adaptable is the nervous system.  So, at any given moment, neural circuits that support certain activities are reinforced, while other circuits are pruned and eventually disabled, a process that allows the nervous system to adapt to the complex needs of its environment. At the same time, many complex neurological and psychiatric disorders arise from a momentum being established where dysfunctional neurological circuits perpetually reinforce themselves.  For these disorders to be treated, momentum should instead be built around a healthy circuit (for those interested, this is the best book I have seen on the subject).30 This momentum is a key reason why it is so important to have healthy thought patterns and regularly actively exercise your brain (another core component of programs for preventing Alzheimer\u2019s).  If you do the opposite (e.g., watch TV all day), dysfunctional patterns can become established habits, while neurological damage occurs as parts of the brain you need but under utilize are pruned away.  A key way the brain accomplishes this adaptability is by eliminating neurons that are no longer deemed essential. Bredesen\u2019s theory of Alzheimer\u2019s is that it results from the balance between preserving and eliminating neurons being shifted towards removing them,31 which inevitably will result in cognitive decline.  Within Bredesen\u2019s model, the amyloid protein plays a key role in this process,32 as when it is initially formed as the amyloid precursor protein (APP), it can then be split into two or four parts. If it is divided into two parts, those parts protect the neurological function in the brain. In comparison, if it is divided into four parts, the neurological function of the brain is damaged, and brain cells are eliminated.  Interestingly, its splitting into four parts causes future APPs to be split into four parts as well (creating a downward spiral). As a result, Bredesen\u2019s approach focuses on regaining a healthy momentum towards the two-part splitting while also providing the signals cells within the body require to survive.   The Cell Danger Response  When cells are exposed to external stressors, they often enter a primitive defensive metabolic cycle where they partially or fully \u201cturn off\u201d (e.g., mitochondrial respiration and protein synthesis within the cell decline) to protect themselves. Many chronic diseases, in turn, result from cells being trapped in this degenerative cycle (which often leads to cell death) rather than exiting it and resuming their normal function. Likewise, many therapies in regenerative medicine work by removing cells from this frozen metabolic state.  Because of this, many complex illnesses (e.g., COVID vaccine injuries, fibromyalgia, or autism) can only be treated if the underlying trigger for the cell danger response is removed. Then a regenerative therapy is provided which signals cells to exit the CDR. Similarly:  \u201cThe principle that blocking protein synthesis prevents long-term memory storage was discovered many years ago. With age, there is a marked decline of protein synthesis in the brain that correlates with defects in proper protein folding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins can activate the integrated stress response (ISR), an evolutionary conserved pathway that decreases protein synthesis. In this way, the ISR may have a causative role in age-related cognitive decline.\u201d  In turn, much as treatments for the CDR often facilitate dementia treatment, therapies that inhibit the ISR have been found to restore the structure and function of brain cells and improve a variety of age-related memory deficits.33,34   DMSO  Dimethyl sulfoxide has a variety of unique therapeutic properties that allow it to treat a variety of diseases (e.g., it is miraculous for strokes and brain injuries), and in the year since I began publicizing this forgotten therapy, I have received thousands of remarkable reports of it treating numerous \u201cincurable illnesses.\u201d  Much of this results from DMSO\u2019s ability to restore normal circulation, protect cells from lethal stressors, and revive shocked cells trapped in the CDR. As such, since the start of the series, in addition to receiving many reports from readers who saved themselves or a loved one from a disabling stroke with DMSO, many have also shared stories like this:  \u201cMy uncle\u2019s wife has dementia and has been unable to speak for over a year.35 My mom recently visited them and told them about DMSO. He began to give his wife DMSO orally. After two weeks she began to talk again.\u201d  Numerous studies (detailed here) have corroborated DMSO\u2019s ability to treat dementia. These include:   \u2022 When cerebral blood flow was permanently reduced in rats, one study found DMSO prevented the neuronal and memory loss that otherwise resulted,36 while another found DMSO given afterwards treated it.37,38 Similar benefits have also been seen after Alzheimer\u2019s was induced by injecting toxins into the brain,39,40 Likewise, in mice (or nematodes) engineered to develop Alzheimer\u2019s, DMSO has been repeatedly shown to prevent the expected neurological damage.41,42,43  \u2022 DMSO has also been shown44 to prevent the neuronal damage from experimentally induced Parkinson\u2019s and preserve the cognitive function of mice bred to rapidly develop severe degeneration of the cerebellum and brainstem.45,46  Note: IV DMSO is one of the few therapies I have come across which can halt Parkinson\u2019s. To some extent oral DMSO helps as well (e.g., see this reader\u2019s comment).47  \u2022 DMSO has also been shown to treat scrapie (a neurodegenerative prion disease from abnormal protein aggregates) in hamsters,48 to increase the activity of ALP the intracellular enzyme which eliminates cellular waste (including misfolded proteins),49 and in a large number of studies, to treat amyloidosis (pathologic accumulations of pathologic proteins.   In humans:   \u2022 18 patients with probable Alzheimer\u2019s after three months, DMSO caused a significant improvement in memory, concentration, communication, and orientation to time and space.50  \u2022 In 104 elderly adults with organic brain disease from the common causes (e.g., strokes, atherosclerosis, Parkinson\u2019s, or head injuries), DMSO greatly improved their psychic and somatic function.51  \u2022 In 100 patients with cerebrovascular diseases CVD, many of whom were senile, over 50 days DMSO caused almost all to have a significant improvement in their CVD, along with significant improvements in mood, mobility, and speech.52    Conclusion  Medicine revolves around finding unique molecular targets for which disease specific treatments can be patented. Unfortunately, this model frequently fails in chronic illnesses, leading to grotesque situations like the one described here, where natural therapies, which can address the actual causes of devastating illnesses are sidelined to protect each disease\u2019s lucrative \u201ctreatment\u201d market.  This needs to change, and for the first time in my lifetime, thanks to MAHA, the political will at last exists to begin addressing the real reasons why there continues to be so much chronic illness in our society. The opportunity to make cognitive decline no longer an inevitable aspect of aging is finally here \u2014 if we dare to seize it!  Author\u2019s Note: This is an abridged version of a longer article which discusses the actual causes and treatments for Alzheimer\u2019s disease and the cognitive decline which precedes it. That article, along with additional links and references, can be read here. Additionally, a companion article on how DMSO treats neurological injuries (e.g., strokes, brain hemorrhages, traumatic brain injuries, spinal paralysis, and developmental delay) can be read here.   A Note from Dr. Mercola About the Author  A Midwestern Doctor (AMD) is a board-certified physician from the Midwest and a longtime reader of Mercola.com. I appreciate AMD\u2019s exceptional insight on a wide range of topics and am grateful to share it. I also respect AMD\u2019s desire to remain anonymous since AMD is still on the front lines treating patients. To find more of AMD\u2019s work, be sure to check out The Forgotten Side of Medicine on Substack.","og_url":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx","og_site_name":"Watchman News","article_published_time":"2026-03-29T00:00:00+00:00","article_modified_time":"2026-03-29T05:43:22+00:00","og_image":[{"url":"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png","type":"","width":"","height":""}],"author":"Admin","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Napisane przez":"Admin","Szacowany czas czytania":"16 minut"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"Article","@id":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx#article","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/"},"author":{"name":"Admin","@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/#\/schema\/person\/3f4506c6002f5893ba45478a4540739f"},"headline":"Reversing Alzheimer&#8217;s \u2014 The Forgotten Causes and Cures Big Pharma Buried","datePublished":"2026-03-29T00:00:00+00:00","dateModified":"2026-03-29T05:43:22+00:00","mainEntityOfPage":{"@id":"https:\/\/watchman.news\/2026\/03\/reversing-alzheimers-the-forgotten-causes-and-cures-big-pharma-buried\/"},"wordCount":3113,"commentCount":0,"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/articles.mercola.com\/sites\/articles\/archive\/2026\/03\/29\/reversing-alzheimers-forgotten-causes-treatments.aspx#primaryimage"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/media.mercola.com\/assets\/images\/mercola\/bestarticles-icon.png","articleSection":["Baptism &amp; 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