Erfahrungsheilkunde 2017; 66(02): 80-87
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-103001
Wissen
© Karl F. Haug Verlag in MVS Medizinverlage Stuttgart GmbH & Co. KG

Lebensweise und Alzheimer

Michael Nehls
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
07 June 2017 (online)

Zusammenfassung

Alzheimer ist eine Mangelkrankheit, verursacht durch Diskrepanzen zwischen unseren natürlichen Bedürfnissen und Folgen der heutigen Lebensweise: Chronischer Stress, ungesunde Ernährung, Mangel an Mikronährstoffen, Tiefschlaf, Bewegung, sozialen Aktivitäten sowie Verlust des Lebenssinns. Basierend auf einer Allgemeinen Theorie der Alzheimer-Entstehung (Unified Theory of Alzheimer‘s Disease, UTAD) beginnt die Erkrankung mit der gestörten Neubildung von Nervenzellen (Neurogenese) im hippocampalen Zentrum für das autobiografische Erinnern. Die mangelhafte adulte Neurogenese führt zunächst zu einem chronisch erhöhten Level an Stresshormonen, kurz- bis mittelfristig zu Depression und letztendlich zu den für Alzheimer typischen neuropathologischen und kognitiven Veränderungen. Durch gezieltes Beheben der individuellen Mängel (der kausalen Risikofaktoren) im Rahmen einer systembiologischen Intervention, lässt sich Alzheimer jedoch nicht nur vermeiden, im Frühstadium der Erkrankung ist der geistige Abbau sogar noch umkehrbar.

Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a deficiency disease, caused by a discrepancy between our natural requirements and individual consequences of our modern way of life, like e. g. chronic stress, unhealthy nutrition, deficiencies in micronutrients, deep sleep as well as physical and social activities, but also a loss of purpose in life. According to the Unified Theory of AD (UTAD), AD is caused by a disturbed generation of neurons (neurogenesis) in the center of autobiographic memory (Hippocampus). Impaired adult hippocampal neurogenesis causes chronically elevated stress hormone levels, which lead to psychological depression in the short- to mid-term and end in AD-typical neuropathological and cognitive alterations. By targeted correction of all individual deficiencies (causal risk factors) by a systems biological intervention strategy, AD can be prevented and the cognitive decline reversed at least in the early phase of the disease.

 
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