Curtin researchers are trialling a medication that could help preserve the cognitive function of people with Alzheimer’s.
In this episode, Sarah Taillier is joined by Professor John Mamo and Dr Virginie Lam from the Curtin Health and Innovation Research Institute. They discuss how they’re trialling an existing drug that could be a game changer for people with Alzheimer’s by preventing the build-up of a protein called amyloid beta in the brain. They also explore some of the lifestyle factors that are likely to cause the disease.
Professor John Mamo
Professor Mamo is a John Curtin Distinguished Professor and Director of the Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute (CHIRI). He leads a team of physiologists and vascular biologists in exploring cerebral capillary dysfunction in a range of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis and in pain disorders.
John is the Principal Investigator of a nationally funded drug study in Alzheimer’s disease. He has published 200 peer reviewed publications and been cited on more than 6300 occasions.
Dr Virginie Lam
Dr Virginie Lam is an Early Career Research Fellow with preclinical and clinical expertise investigating the role of micro-nutrients in regulating brain capillaries and cognitive performance. Her research is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council.
She completed her PhD in 2016 and currently possesses authorship to more than 60 publications.
Virginie’s current line of research examines the interactive effects of vasoactive nutrients with lifestyle and pharmacological interventions that can restore vascular damage to improve cognitive health and halt the onset and progression of vascular-based neurodegenerative diseases.
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Host: Sarah Taillier
Content creator: Zoe Taylor
Producer and recordist: Emilia Jolakoska
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