Alzheimer Disease
Conditions
Brief summary
In humans, insulin is secreted in pulses from the pancreatic beta-cells, and these oscillations help to maintain fasting plasma glucose levels within a narrow normal range. These pulses become disrupted in the presence of insulin resistance. Some people have referred to Alzheimer's Disease as type 3 diabetes because the glucose uptake in the brain is reduced by 30%. Clinical observations in clinics that treat patients with insulin pulses every 5 minutes for 3 hours twice a week for 2 weeks followed by once a week for 6 weeks and followed by less frequency treatments suggest an improvement in type 2 diabetes control, reduction in insulin resistance and an improvement in diabetes complications. A patient with Parkinson's Disease was treated with this pulsed insulin paradigm and experienced dramatic improvement that has now been maintained over years. Parkinson's Disease has been reported to have a decreased glucose uptake in the brain, so pulsed insulin treatment was tried in a small number of patients with Alzheimer's Disease and there was an impression that they showed improvement. Clinics that use pulsed insulin treatment change more than one parameter of the insulin pulses which makes it difficult to determine what is giving the improvement. The euglycemic hyper-insulinemic clamp, also called a clamp, is a well-standardized test that measures insulin resistance and involves intravenous insulin infusion. This single patient study will enroll one patient with early Alzheimer's disease and insulin resistance. The subject will have one standard clamp test with continuous insulin followed by 4 clamps over a 2-week period using the same amount of insulin over the same period of time but administered in pulses every 5 minutes. This was the number of pulsed insulin treatments needed to see a dramatic improvement in Parkinson's disease. The cognition in the Alzheimer's disease patient will be thoroughly evaluated with questionnaires and walking on a special mat while doing arithmetic tasks before and after the 4 pulsed insulin clamps. If this study demonstrates an improvement in cognition, one will know that the only thing that changed from the standard clamp was the pulse nature of the insulin delivery.
Detailed description
The purpose of this research study is to test the effect of an insulin treatment on Alzheimer's disease.
Interventions
After passing the screening, participation in the research study will be approximately three weeks. The participant will have seven study visits all at the Pennington Center. On five occasions, the participant will have a five-hour visit in the inpatient unit. At the study visit blood will be drawn. The total amount of blood drawn during the study is approximately 12 fluid ounces.
This procedure measures how the body responds to insulin. Insulin is normally produced by the body during meals and helps the body use sugar. There will be two IV lines, one in the participant's arm and one in the participant's hand on the opposite side. Small amounts of glucose and insulin will be infused into the participant's arm. The participant's blood sugar level will be checked every 5-10 minutes from the IV in the hand to determine how much glucose the participant should have to keep blood sugar at a normal level. The participant's hand will be placed inside a warming box to increase skin temperature to about 105 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature will be warm, but not uncomfortable. During the IV procedure, a small amount of the participant's own blood (less than 1 teaspoon) will immediately be returned into the vein through the IV after each specimen is collected.
After the participant rests for 30 minutes, a clear plastic hood will be placed over the participant's head and chest area. The hood is ventilated with fresh air. The participant's oxygen intake and carbon dioxide output will be measured for 30 minutes to determine how many calories the participant burns during the time they are being tested.
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Early Alzheimer's Disease * Insulin Resistance
Exclusion criteria
* Inability to walk * Unable to read, understand or inability to complete questionnaire * Belong to a vulnerable group like prisoners
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Effect of tissue sensitivity to insulin | Two weeks | To determine the effect of tissue sensitivity to insulin delivered in pulses compared to insulin delivered continuously during the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp test (clamp). The hypothesis is that delivery of insulin in pulses during the clamp (pulsatile clamp) will increase glucose disposal rate (GDR) compared to continuous delivery during the clamp (continuous clamp). To test the hypothesis, we will measure GDR during one pulsatile clamp and one continuous clamp at 40mU/m2/min insulin infusion. |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Effect of the pulsatile clamp at 40mU/m2/min insulin infusion on signs and symptoms of Alzheimer's disease | Two weeks | To determine the effect of the pulsatile clamp at 40mU/m2/min insulin infusion on signs and symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. The hypothesis is that the signs and symptoms of Alzheimer's disease will improve following four pulsatile clamp treatments. To test the hypothesis, we will conduct assessments of cognition, homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance, and brain insulin resistance prior to and following four pulsatile insulin clamps conducted twice weekly for two weeks. |
Countries
United States