We have a cleaning lady who comes each week to help keep our
house in order. She also understands the
value of comorbidities. She is one of my independent observers, in changes in the
behaviour of Monty, aged 10 with ASD. She
has a friend, whose husband was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s.
Alzheimer’s is not autism, but they are both examples of
brain damage.
Still in his early 50s, the husband does not recognize his
children and cannot leave home. The expert
Professor, treating him privately, was not halting the rapid decline.
So the cleaning lady asks me about all my investigations and
decides that she might as well tell her friend.
She decided to suggest the antioxidant NAC and the cholinergic stimulant
nicotine.
Well, after NAC, the husband was able to make it to the WC
and do his business. A small step
forward.
After a day with the nicotine patch, things really changed
so much that the family decided that they should seek a second opinion, this time
from a doctor, yet to publish a book.
Doctor number two decided that it is not Alzheimer’s after all, and
the prescribed medicines of the last three years were only making things worse. And the new therapy? Nicotine patches.
Conclusion
The conclusion is self-evident.
The next related conditions I will be investigating are cluster
headaches, febrile seizures and absence seizures.
Wow! Just...wow. Nicotine patches for the win. I wonder if the decline in smoking (at least in America) is related to the rise in other diseases. Not that I think smoking is good.
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