University Study Seeks to Unlock Secrets of Alzheimer’s

Published in Pawtucket Times on December 8, 2003

 Planning bingo, finding that right word for the crossword puzzle you are working on, reading The Times or the latest bestselling book and even dancing might just be the right mental stimulation to help slow down the ravaging advances of Alzheimer’s.

Boston University researcher Nancy Emerson Lombardo, Ph.D., is seeking Rhode Island and Southern Massachusetts research participants to determine if the theory “use it or lose it” is fact or fiction.

“The brain never stops growing, especially in an enriched learning environment,” said Lombardo, who said science has shown the brain can actually replace neurons and grow connections between them.

Lombardo’s current research study is looking to prove that the brain’s ability to adapt, through cognitive training therapies can help persons who are already have Alzheimer’s disease slow down and even regain some of the cognitive losses they are experiencing.

Lombardo said that even with a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, over the last decade researchers have found you can still exercise your brain, reap the benefits of improved short-term memory and experience a better quality of live.

These studies suggest keeping the mind active can help explain how some people can delay the onset of memory loss and Alzheimer’s disease symptoms for years.

In one study, research B.P. Sobel found that playing bingo improved short-term memory, Lombardo noted.  In another study, H. Wang reported in the American Journal of Epidemiology that staying active in social and leisure activities is associated with a decreased risk of memory loss, she said.

An Albert Einstein College of Medicine study even reported in a recent issue of the New England Journal of  Medicine that “reading, playing board games, playing musical instruments and dancing were associated with a reduced risk of [memory loss].”

Lombardo, serving as principal investigator at the Boston University Alzheimer’s Disease Center, told All About Seniors about the BEST (Brain Enhancement Strengthening Treatment) study.  This study is currently examining whether fun, combined with a challenging set of cognitive exercises, can be performed in a home setting to sharpen up the cognitive abilities of a person diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s.

The BEST study, based on the work of Lynn Lazarnus Seper, Ed.D. – who serves as the co-principal investigator with Lombardo – is working with early-stage Alzheimer’s participant and their care partners over a six-month period.

Serper used many of these same techniques in her successful self-recovery from a major debilitating stroke. She has also experienced successful results in her clinical practice with persons with Alzheimer’s, as well as those with stroke and other brain injuries.

Lombardo’s study is currently seeking early-stage Alzheimer’s participants in Rhode Island and Southern Massachusetts, ages 58 to 85, who will meet over 26 weeks in their own homes with cognitive educator Ann Lewis.  Lewis has received rigorous training from Serper and other researchers on the BEST team.

Eligible participants, who must have at least a two-year college degree, must have a diagnosis of probably Alzheimer’s disease.  Additionally, they  must be taking one of the three medications – Aricept, Exelon or Reminyl.

Finally, they must reside within a 40-minute drive of Newton, or Billerica, Mass. Or Newport, Rhode Island.

Study participants will work on mental exercises aimed at their prior and current interests/hobbies as well as current local and world news.

The format turns theses everyday activities into brain therapy. The cognitive educators will also assist participants in developing strategies for social and conversational situations.

The Best of…Seniors Turn to Acupuncture to Treat Age-Related Illness

Published April 30, 2001, Pawtucket Times

            New lifestyle changes are taking hold of age 50-plus seniors.  Many are dropping junk foods, soft drinks, and coffee from their daily diets in favor of following microbiotic recipes, buying only organically grown foods and drinking spring water.

             A growing number of older Rhode Islanders are also combining visits to their personal physicians with nonconventional healing practices, from chiropractic care to Chinese medicine, herbs, homeopathy, acupuncture, biofeedback, message, and reflexology.

            This trend is reflected as far back as 1993 when a study published by the New England Journal of Medicine noted that about 34 percent of 1,539 people surveyed used one alternative therapy in the past year, one-third had even seen an alternative therapy provider.

And Speaking of Acupuncture…

           Acupuncture stands out as a uniquely effective treatment modality for ailments effecting older persons.

          Acupuncture needs stimulate specific acupuncture points lying on identified meridians or pathways for energy or Qi (pronounced “chee”) that are located on the head, body or ears.

          Stimulation is accomplished by inserting and then manipulating very think sterile single-use needles.  This alternative therapy can also include heat, electro-stimulation, low intensity lasers or magnets, each applied to selected acupuncture points.

         According to Nancy Emerson Lombardo, Ph.D., senior research scientist at Wellesley College Center for Research and Women, acupuncture treats the whole body rather than its isolated symptoms and may be particularly useful for a disease caused by the aging process, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

         Dr. Emerson Lombardo states that her study, the first of its kind in the nation, found that acupuncture is definitely feasible for American elderly with Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia.

         Moreover, acupuncture relieves symptoms of anxiety and depression in most of the patients in her study.  Succesful relief of severe anxiety and depression in four study participants also improved cognitive functioning in three of the four.

         Various research studies reveal just how acupuncture works, Emerson Lombardo said, noting that researchers have found that acupuncture can: release certain neurotransmitters and hormones (including endorphins, which relieve pain and elevate mood).

          Acupuncture can also increase blood circulation, release substances known to reduce inflammation in tissues, and/or boost the immune system.

          Furthermore, the internationally recognized Wellesley College researcher added that “acupuncture has proven effective for many mental and physical complaints afflicting the elderly.”

         These include pain and arthritis; stroke; headaches and back aches; inflammations; insomnia; allergies and asthma, nausea and constipation; and postoperative pain.

         “Acupuncture is as effective as conventional drugs and has fewer side-effects for improving emotions, and helping with symptoms of anxiety, sleep disturbance, and irritability,” Dr. Emerson Lombardo said.

          In treating major depression, acupuncture has shown improvement rates comparable to those of psychotherapy or pharmacotherapy, she adds.

         Dr. Emerson Lombardo stated that acupuncture therapy should be considered a safe treatment.

          The unconventional medical treatment has been approved and is recognized as a safe and effective therapy for treating various conditions by both the World Health Organization, the U.S. Federal Drug Administration and the National Institute of Health.

Finding the Best Acupuncturist

           When shopping around for the best acupuncturist, Dr. Emerson Lombardo suggested that seniors should interview the acupuncturist briefly on the telephone, requesting information about training, licensing, and experience in treating the particular ailment(s).

          Call the American Association of Oriental Medicine (AAOM) at (888) 500-7999 or (610) 266-1433 to obtain a list of local licensed acupuncturists who have had an average of 2,400 hours of study.  Or get this list from AAOM’s web site, (www.aaom.org).

           Herb Weiss is a Pawtucket-based freelance writer that covers aging, health care and medical issues.  This article appears in the April 30, 2001 issue of the Pawtucket Times.

Mental Health’s Forgotten Constituency

Published in Aging Today in March/April 1996

The principal authors of a new report on mental health nursing homes charge that cutbacks in Medicare and the block granting of Medicaid will have a disproportionately large impact on the funding of mental health treatments. The report, “Achieving Mental Health of Nursing Home Residents: Overcoming Barriers to Mental Health Care,” which this writer helped prepare, calls mentally ill residents long-term care’s “forgotten constituency.”

According to Nancy Emerson Lombardo, one the new report’s authors, mental health experts worry that the situation for mentally impaired elders may worsen if proposals are passed by the 104th Congress to drastically cut Medicare, dismantle the Medicaid program and repeal essential features of the Nursing Home Reform Act.

Big Battle

Lombardo emphasized in an interview that, given present efforts in Washington to reduce Medicare and Medicaid spending. “It will take a big battle to restore mental health funding even to the inadequate levels of a few years ago, let alone bring it up to par with payments for treatment of other medical problems.”

She said that adding to the difficulties facing mental health advocates is evidence that many managed care programs taking over Medicare benefits for elders have greatly reduced mental health services.

Evidence has mounted in recent years, some from federal investigators, that physical illnesses of people especially frail elders, cannot be treated separately from mental illness. The report quotes a 1982 Government Accounting Office report that stated, “Left undiagnosed and untreated, mentally ill residents have limited prospects for improvement, and their overall conditions m ay decline more rapidly and ultimately place greater demands on the health care system.”

Achieving Mental Health…is being published this spring by the nonprofit Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for the Aged’s (RCA) Research and Training Institute in Boston, in conjunction with the Mental Health Policy Resource Center (MHPRC) in Washington, D.C. It is based on a 1993 invitational conference that brought together more than 130 experts in mental health and aging. Besides being released as an HRCA issue brief, the 50-page paper will be simultaneously published in the Journal of Mental Health and Aging (New York: Springer Publishing Company). The findings are being presented at the American Society on Aging’s 42nd Annual Meeting in Anaheim, Calif., in March.

The report enumerates a variety of obstacles to the provision of appropriate mental health services.  These include a shortage of mental health professionals trained in geriatrics; lack of in-service training in nursing homes to teach facility staff to treat behavioral and functional consequences of mental health or dementia; and inadequate Medicare payments and reimbursement rules that do not reflect the relative costs of preferred treatments.

Model Programs Recommendation

The report also notes that, in spite of these hurdles, model mental health programs do exist in some nursing homes; they are funded by an array of federal and state agencies, nonprofit foundations and even by some of the facilities themselves, drawing upon nonfederal funds.  The issue brief recommends that such programs be identified, cost-benefits calculated and the results widely disseminated to nursing homes for replication.

However, mental health experts involved in the issue brief agree that progress is slow and good mental health care in nursing homes is still exception rather than the rule.

Key recommendations in the report include:

  • Additional funding for research, staff training, and consumer education initiatives;
  • Improved Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement to pay for psychiatrists to train nursing home staff members in mental health services;
  • Sthe “unbundling,” or separating, of mental health services from nursing home per diem rates, so that funding intended for such assistance cannot be buried in lump-sum reimbursements for care and forgotten;
  • Full implementation of all federal nursing home reform mandates passed in 1987 and 1989, such as those requiring training for nursing home staff and strictly limiting the use of psychotropic drugs and physical restraints with residents;
  • Increasing the percentage of mental health services paid for by Medicare and other federal and private insurance to match that paid for other medical services.

Further, the report recommends that reimbursement incentives to be redirected to recognize  behavioral methods and deemphasize “medication-only” treatment.

The report’s authors added that Washington has failed to recognize cost-effective but humane alternatives to wholesale budget cuts.

For example, given the current antiregulatory mood in Congress, report cards for consumers can be one solution to assist family members in choosing a nursing home that provides adequate mental health training to its staff, said another of the report’s authors, Gail K. Robinson, deputy director of the MHPRC.

She suggested, “With such ratings, consumers and their families can be more selective in choosing a nursing home that provides better quality mental health care. Moreover, facilities could use the ratings to identify their weaknesses and correct them.”

According to Lombardo, there are less costly ways to improve mental health services than obtaining psychiatric specialists care for most residents. For example, she said, “The facility’s in-service training budget could easily be used to bring in experts to teach staff how to care for residents with mental illness or behavioral problems.” This redirection of funds would allow specialists to serve as trainers and troubleshooters, rather than as  consultants for individual residents.

Lombardo also called on nursing home administrators to support simple changes in their in-service training philosophies: “Administrators must realize the actions of all staff members in their facilities affect the mental health of residents either positively or negatively. Therefore, every person should attend training on mental and behavioral issues.”