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Title: Emu-based compositions for mental well-being and
method of use
United States Patent: 6,951,658
Issued: October 4, 2005
Inventors: Pearson; Maurine (Pilot Point, TX); Barr; Teresa
Leigh (Port Townsend, WA)
Assignee: Pearson Research & Development Limited (Pilot
Point, TX)
Appl. No.: 614925
Filed: July 8, 2003
Abstract
The invention is a method and supplement for treatment of symptoms of
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and combination thereof,
comprising: from about 20 wt % to about 70 wt % emu oil, wherein the emu oil
further comprises from about 1 wt % to about 12 wt % linolenic acid; from
about 5 wt % to about 30 wt % l-arginine; from about 5 wt % to about 30 wt %
pyroglutamate; from about 0.5. wt % to about 20 wt % B-12 methylcobalamin;
and from about 0.5 wt % to about 20 wt % calcium, wherein the supplement is
adapted for crossing a blood brain barrier, and for fortification of
phospholipids in neurotransmitters of a brain to increase cell proliferation
for treatment of symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and
combinations thereof.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a supplement for treatment of symptoms of
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and combination thereof. The
supplement is made of emu oil, L-arginine, pyroglutamate, B-12
methylcobalamin, and calcium. The emu oil includes linolenic acid. The
supplement is adapted for crossing a blood brain barrier and for
fortification of phospholipids in neurotransmitters of a brain to increase
cell proliferation for treatment of symptoms of Alzheimer's disease,
dementia, depression, and combinations thereof.
The invention is also a method for treatment of symptoms of Alzheimer's
disease, dementia, manic depression, bi-polar disease and combinations
thereof. The method involves preparing a supplement and administering the
supplement to a patient. The supplement is adapted for crossing a blood
brain barrier, and for fortification of phospholipids in neurotransmitters
of a brain to increase cell proliferation for treatment of symptoms of
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and combinations thereof.
The invention can be in the form of a topical composition, an injestable
composition, and an injectable composition, or applied using a bandage,
patch or similar elastomeric patch.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Before explaining the present invention in detail, it is to be understood
that the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments herein and
it can be practiced or carried out in various ways.
The present invention is a supplement for treatment of symptoms of
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, manic depression, and bi-polar disease.
The present invention is a Emu oil based formulated composition that has
transdermal properties, both internal and external thus creating healthier
cells within the bodies of humans and animals that proliferate at an
accelerated rate, while feeding and maintaining cell health with the emu oil
composition. The invention absorbs quickly in the gut and intestines,
releasing into the bloodstream and crossing the blood brain barrier,
reducing inflammation that can cause damage to the neurons, increases cell
proliferation, increasing the bodies ability to maintain and regenerate
cells, thereby becoming an effective treatment as a cognitive enhancer for
Alzheimer's disease, dementia and depression related disorders such as
depression and bi-polar disease while having the unexpected effect of
lowering LDL cholesterol.
The invention has a preferred formula containing
 | Emu oil—20-70 wt %; |
 | L-Arginine—5-30 wt %; |
 | Pyroglutamate—5-30 wt %; |
 | B-12 Methylcobalamin—0.5-20wt %; and |
 | Calcium—0.5-20wt %. |
In an alternative embodiment, the present invention has the form of an
external transdermal delivery system that can be used with or without an
elastomeric device. The formula with the having the external transdermal
delivery system includes
 | Emu oil—20-70 wt %; |
 | L-Arginine—5-30 wt %; |
 | Pyroglutamate—5-30 wt %; |
 | B-12 Methylcobalamin—0.5-20wt %; and |
 | Calcium—0.5-20 wt %. |
In an alternative embodiment, the present invention can be in the form of a
nutritional supplement for having a positive effect on serum cholesterol.
The formula having a positive effect on serum cholesterol has
 | Emu oil—20-70 wt %; |
 | L-Arginine—5-30 wt %; |
 | Pyroglutamate—5-30 wt %; |
 | B-12 Methylcobalamin—0.5-2 wt %; and |
 | Calcium—0.5-2 wt %. |
Other vitamins are contemplated to be used within the scope of the present
invention.
These vitamins include Vitamin C and Vitamin E.
The emu oil that is most preferred in this invention has the following
chemical analysis:
| Free fatty Acid |
0.02% |
| Peroxide Value |
0.3 units |
| Moisture |
0.02% |
| Calculated Iodine Value |
72.8 mEq/100 g |
| OSI |
11.95 Hours @ 110.0 degrees C. |
The fatty acid composition of emu oil with respect to human skin oil is as
follows:
| Myristic C:14:0 |
0.3% |
2.1% |
| Palmitic C:16:0 |
20.3% |
20.2% |
| Palmitoleic C:16:1 |
3.2% |
3.8% |
| Margaric C:17:0 |
0.2% |
| Margaric oleic C:17:1 |
0.1% |
| Stearic C:18:0 |
10.1% |
11.2% |
| Oleic C:18:1 |
51.6% |
30.8% |
| Linoleic C:18:2 |
13.1% |
15.1% |
| Linolenic C:18:3 |
0.5% |
0.3% |
| Arachidic C:20:0 |
0.1% |
| Eicosinoac C:20:1 |
0.5% |
Other fatty acids contemplate4d by the invention include elaidic and
vaccenic.
An analysis of fatty acids in emu oil reveals that the oil contains
approximately 70% unsaturated fatty acids. The major fatty acid found in emu
oil is oleic acid, which is monosaturated and which comprises over 40% of
the total fatty acid content. Emu oil also contains both of the two EFA's
which are important to human health. 20% linolenic, and 1-2% alpha-linolenic
acid, which are also known as octodocenic acids. It is a surprising a novel
aspect of the present invention that the emu oil in the emu oil composition
has a naturally occurring odd-numbered carbon molecule known as margaric
acid C17:0, and margaric oleic acid C17:1. Most odd-numbered carbon
molecules are synthesized. It is a surprising and novel aspect of the
present invention that the emu oil in the composition is unique as it is
naturally derived and is not in opposition with the gatekeepers of the blood
brain barrier.
The blood-brain barrier maintains a homeostatic environment in the central
nervous system. The capillaries that supply the blood to the brain have
tight junctions which block passage of most molecules through the capillary
endothelial membranes. While the membranes do allow passage of lipid soluble
materials, such as heroin and other psychoactive drugs, water-soluble
materials such as glucose, proteins and amino acids do not pass through the
blood-brain barrier. Therefore, it is a surprising and novel aspect of the
present invention that the transdermal abilities of the odd-numbered carbon
molecule naturally inherent to the emu oil along with the synergistic effect
of the amino acid L-arginine and pyroglutamate act together to cross the
blood-brain barrier via the central nervous system and therefore fortify and
maintain cell and neuron health.
The method and composition of the present invention therefore provides for
delivery to the central nervous system of compounds that are necessary for
treatment modalities in any condition affecting the central nervous system
where the blood-brain barrier would impede the delivery of the compound. The
method and composition of the present invention is an improvement of
currently available means of delivery of compounds to the central nervous
system through the blood-brain barrier, such as oral ingestion, direct
topical application to the skin and mucous membranes. Also the application
can be made using a patch, such as an elastomeric bandage with the
application placed on it.
A surprising and novel feature of the emu oil is unique unsaturated fat
molecules, as most land animals have a higher concentration of saturated
fats. Typical fat contains both saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. The
fats found in land animals have a higher percentage of side chains than do
the fats in sea animals. Although unsaturated fats are less efficient
storage sites for food energy because they have fewer CH bonds than do
saturated fats, they have a distinct advantage for animals that live in cold
water. Saturated fats melt at higher temperatures than do unsaturated fats.
In cold waters, sea animals with solid fats would have the reduced ability
to move. This theory also subject to analysis, and may be proven easier to
transport unsaturated fats through the skin structure and membrane into the
lipid layer for release into the central nervous system and blood-brain
barrier, rather than a saturated fat, as well as quickly absorbed by the
gut, to be transported to the body.
Essential fatty acids (EFA's) play two important roles in human physiology.
Both derive from their incorporation into the phospholipids of cell
membranes. By virtue of their high degree of unsaturation, and, hence low
melting points, they decrease membrane viscosity and affect several aspects
of membrane function. Nearly all cells contain basic fat and oil substances.
Fats are called energy storehouses, as on a weight-by-weight basis, they
contain twice as much energy as a carbohydrate or protein. Fatty acids are
also natural blood thinners; they can prevent blood clots, which can lead to
heart attack and stroke. Essential fatty acids are also known to contain
natural anti-inflammatory compounds. The emu oil in the emu oil composition
contains natural essential fatty acids, which are from a natural source and
non-toxic.
The present invention, when topically applied is seen to increase the
synthesis of DNA in the epidermis, which is a measure of increase in the
proliferative activity of the dermis. It is contemplated that the presence
of Oleic acid, a simple triglyceride which contains only one type of fatty
acid (oleic acid) enables the present invention to work effectively.
Naturally occurring triglycerides usually are mixed triglycerides; i.e.,
they contain more than one fatty acid. An example of a mixed triglyceride is
palmmitodiolein, the fatty acid composition of which is, as the name
indicates, one molecule of palmitic acid and two molecules of oleic acid.
This triglyceride may have structural arrangements and the fatty acid
molecules may be arranged with palmitic acid occupying any of the two
possible different positions. Oleic acid is also a monosaturated fat. When
these fatty acid molecules are combined with a stearic acid molecule, they
create an odd-numbered carbon atom, which has a transdermal effect
internally or externally in the bodies of human and animals, thereby
transporting beneficial nutrients across the tight junctions of the blood
brain barrier to fortify cells naturally, without toxicity.
Essential fatty acids are essential polyunsaturated fatty acids. Fatty acid
deficiencies such as linoleic acid deficiency symptoms include scaly skin
and slow to heal wounds. Linoleic acid is required for the formation and
maintenance of the epidermal barrier. The present invention requires
essential fatty acids.
Essential fatty acids containing and odd-numbered carbon atom are essential
and crucial to fortify neurons and transport beneficial ingredients to the
neurotransmitters in the brain and strengthen and rebuild the cells by
increasing essential fatty acids as well as amino acid content through the
central nervous system and crossing the blood brain barrier, thus allowing
and enhancing new cell and membrane proliferation, as well as transporting
beneficial vitamin, nutrients and drugs through the tight junctions of the
blood brain barrier and to the cell of the neurons.
Stearic acid is also known as octadecanoic acid, one of the most common long
chain fatty acids, found in combined form in natural animal and vegetable
fats. Commercial stearic acid is a mixture of approximately equal amounts of
stearic and palmitic acids and small amounts of oleic acid. This in turn is
also an odd-numbered carbon atom which is naturally occurring in the emu oil
of the composition. In nature stearic acid occurs primarily as a mixed
triglyceride, or fat, with other long-chain acids and as an ester of fatty
alcohol. It is much more abundant in animal fat than in vegetable fat; lard
and tallow often contain up to 30 percent stearic acid. Stearic acid is a
component of a preferred formulation of the present invention.
The composition and structure of the fatty acids of the naturally occurring
lipids have an even number of carbon atoms because they are synthesized from
acetyl groups, each of which contains two carbon atoms. Fatty acids with 16
(palmitic acid) and 18 (stearic acid) carbon atoms are most commonly found
in nature. Fatty acids constitute important components of lipids in plants,
animals and microorganisms. In most cases, they are not found in free form,
but instead are bound to other compounds to form fatty acid containing
lipid, e.g., neutral lipids (triglycerides) sterols, phosphoglycerides such
as lecithin, and sphingolipids such as sphingomyelin.
Two typical fatty acids are oleic and palmitic. Although palmitic acid and
stearic acid are the major saturated fatty acids found in animal and plant
tissues, significant amounts of other saturated fatty acids such as myristic
acid and lauric acid, occur in certain tissues, and lignoceric acid and
behenic acid also are found in high concentrations in healthy brain
sphingolipids and neurofibulatroy tangles. Amounts of fatty acids with an
odd number of carbon atoms are also known, e.g., pentadecanoic acid and
heptadeconoic acid. The present invention emu oil composition contains high
amounts of octadecanoic acid, pentadecanoic acid and heptadeconoic acid.
Naturally occurring heptadocenic acid is normally isolated in mutton and
shark liver oil, and is naturally occurring and as well present in high
amounts in the emu oil.
Over the past few decades, Alzheimer's disease has emerged from obscurity.
Once considered a rare disorder, it is now recognized as a major public
health problem having a severe impact on millions of Americans and their
families. Alzheimer's disease is one of the most common causes of the loss
of mental function known broadly as dementia. This type of dementia proceeds
in stages, gradually destroying memory, reason, judgment, language, and
eventually the ability to carry out even the simplest of tasks. These
characteristic symptoms acquired a name in the early part of the 20th
century when Alois Alzheimer, a German physician, described the signs of the
disease in the brain. Alzheimer had a patient in her fifties who suffered
from what seemed to be a mental illness. But when she died in 1906, an
autopsy revealed dense deposits, now called neuritic plaques, outside and
around the nerve cells in her brain. Inside the cells were twisted strands
of fiber, or neurofibrillary tangles.
Currently, a definite diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease is still only
possible when an autopsy reveals these hallmarks of the disease. Plaques and
tangles remained mysterious substances until the 1980's, when
neuroscientists discovered the proteins that make up these telltale
anomalies. As research progresses, it is turning up clues to how plaques and
tangles develop and how they relate to other changes in the brain. We now
know that Alzheimer's begins in the entorhinal cortex and proceeds to the
hippocampus, a way station important in memory formation. It then gradually
spreads to other regions, particularly the cerebral cortex. This is the
outer area of the brain, which is involved in functions such as language and
reason. In the regions attacked by Alzheimer's, the nerve cells or neurons
degenerate, losing their connections or synapses with other neurons. Some
neurons die.
The cerebral cortex is involved in conscious thought and language; the basal
forebrain, which has large numbers of neurons containing acetylcholine, a
chemical important in memory and learning; the hippocampus, which is
essential to memory storage; neuritic plaques; and neurofibrillary tangles.
Alzheimer's disease attacks nerve cells or neurons in several regions of the
brain. The earliest signs of Alzheimer's are found in the nearby entorhinal
cortex. Hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease include neuritic plaques or outside
neurons, and neurofibrillary tangles inside neurons. As the hippocampal
neurons degenerate, short-term memory falters. Often the ability to perform
routine tasks begins to deteriorate as well. Disturbing behaviors, such as
wandering and agitation, beset many people as the disease progresses. In its
final stages Alzheimer's disease wipes out the ability to recognize even
close family members or to communicate in any way. All sense of self seems
to vanish, and the individual becomes completely dependent on others for
care. Patients often live for years with this condition, dying eventually
from pneumonia or other diseases. The duration of Alzheimer's disease from
time of diagnosis to death can be 20 years or more. The average length is
thought to be in the range of 4 to 8 years.
An estimated four million people living in the United States have
Alzheimer's disease. Most surveys have found the percentage of people age 85
and older who have any kind of dementia, including Alzheimer's, to be in the
range of 25 to 35 percent. One study in Boston, however, found that the
percentage of people with Alzheimer's disease alone was 47.2 percent in
people age 85 and over. One problem in getting accurate figures lies in the
lack of a single definition of either dementia or Alzheimer's disease. If
current population trends continue and no cure is found, the actual number
of people with the disease could double every 20 years.
The cost of caring for a person with Alzheimer's disease is extremely high,
the government covers an estimated $4.4 billion dollars per year, and states
cover an additional $4.1 billion per year. Most of the remaining costs fall
on the patient and their family. Caring for a patient with Alzheimer's
disease costs more than $47,000 a year whether the person lives at home or
in a nursing home, according to a study in northern California.
In addition, the composition can be used to treat for inflammation of the
brain tissue and a method has been developed to use one of the embodiments
of the invention for depression, including manic depression or
alternatively, bi polar disease.
The brain has hundreds of billions of neurons, any one of which can have
thousands, even hundreds of thousands, of connections with other neurons.
Within and among their extensive branches travel dozens of chemical
messengers; neurotransmitters, hormones, growth factors, and more, linking
each neuron with others in a vast communications network. Somewhere in this
complex signaling system lies the cause of Alzheimer's disease. In the past
two decades, neuroscientists have combed through it in search of defects
that might explain what goes wrong in this disease. One of their earliest
findings came from studies of neurotransmitters, the chemicals that relay
messages between neurons.
Neurotransmitters reside in tiny sacs at the ends of axons, the long
tube-like extensions of neurons. Released when electrical impulses pass
along the axon, the chemicals cross a minute space called the synapse and
bind to a molecule or receptor sitting in the membrane of the next neuron.
The neurotransmitters then either break down or pass back into the first
neuron, while other substances inside the second neuron take up and relay
the message. In the mid 1970's, scientists discovered that levels of a
neurotransmitter called acetylcholine fell sharply in people with
Alzheimer's disease. The discovery was intriguing for several reasons.
Acetylcholine is a critical neurotransmitter in the process of forming
memories. Moreover, it is the neurotransmitter used commonly by neurons in
the hippocampus and cerebral cortex—regions devastated by Alzheimer's
disease. Since that early discovery, which was one of the first to link
Alzheimer's disease with biochemical changes in the brain, acetylcholine has
been the focus of hundreds of studies.
Scientists have found that its levels fall somewhat in normal aging and the
loss of hormones, such as estrogen, testosterone and human growth hormone,
but drop by about 90 percent in people with Alzheimer's disease. They have
turned up evidence linking this decline to memory impairment. And they have
looked for ways to boost its levels as a possible treatment for Alzheimer's
disease. Other neurotransmitters have also been implicated in Alzheimer's
disease. For example, serotonin, somatostatin, and noradrenaline levels are
lower than normal in some Alzheimer's patients, and deficits in these
substances may contribute to sensory disturbances, aggressive behavior, and
neuron death.
Most neurotransmitter research, however, continues to focus on acetylcholine
and the loss of hormones because of its steep decline in Alzheimer's disease
and its close ties to memory formation and reasoning.
Once the message carried by a neurotransmitter has crossed the synapse it
passes into another territory, where neuroscientists are beginning to find
more clues to Alzheimer's disease. The gateways to this new territory are
the receptors, coil-shaped proteins embedded in neuron membranes. First,
these molecules have chemical bonds with molecules of fat, called
phospholipids that lie next to them in the membrane. Phospholipids are polar
compounds. Polar compounds carry an electrical charge at one end. Several
studies have detected phospholipid abnormalities in neurons affected by
Alzheimer's disease.
These abnormalities might change the behavior of neighboring receptors and
garble the message as it passes from neuron to neuron. Several genes
associated with Alzheimer's disease have an impact on one or more of these
systems. They may create problems for the vasculature, in the metabolism of
cholesterol or in the synthesis of proteins. For example, the mutations in
chromosomes 21, 14 and 1 have an impact on how proteins are synthesized.
Alzheimer's also causes changes in the immune system. It elicits
inflammatory reactions, producing toxins that kill cells. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories
may work for just this reason, because they block that process. The natural
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory properties of the emu oil composition are
also non-toxic and can cross the blood brain barrier to help overcome the
symptoms of Alzheimers, dementia and mood imbalance.
Secretagogues are substances that stimulate the endocrine system to increase
hormonal secretions. There are two peptide hormones that act together to
increase or decrease HGH output from the pituitary gland. These hormones are
Somatostatin and Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone Growth hormones are
essential substances produced in the body that help repair and maintain
muscle tissue, and support proper body function. Deficiencies in growth
hormones may result in fatigue, impaired cognition, muscle weakness, and
emotional imbalance.
And finally, the endocrine system, which secretes hormones directly into the
bloodstream, plays a significant role in the impact and possible treatment
of Alzheimer's disease. There are at least two classes of hormones that
affect Alzheimer's disease. One is a corticoid steroid, the stress hormones
that play an important role in energetics. In excessive amounts it kills
cells and it kills cells precisely in the same area where Alzheimer's
pathology occurs. For women, estrogen is the other important hormone
involved. In addition to regulating the reproductive cycle, it has a
tremendous impact on how the nervous system repairs itself. It has a
synergistic interaction with the neurotrophins, a class of chemicals
involved in repair systems and in cell reproduction. Estrogen proves one of
the most promising areas of drug treatments.
The role of estrogen in maintaining health has been receiving increasing
attention in health reports. Recent studies, including one published in
August in The Lancet, reported a link between the loss of estrogen and
cognitive decline. However, it could be that elevated levels of two other
hormones FSH and LH are more important as a factor in the development of
Alzheimer's disease.
The synergistic effect of the L-arginine, pyroglutamate and emu oil in the
present invention acts as a secretagogue as it naturally helps maintain ones
own natural hormonal levels.
Second, researchers have uncovered several types of receptors for
acetylcholine and are now exploring their different effects on message
transmission. It may be that the shapes and actions of the receptors
themselves, independent of their neighboring phospholipids, play a role in
Alzheimer's.
But the receptor is just the starting point of the cell's communications
system. When a neurotransmitter binds to a receptor, it triggers a cascade
of biochemical interactions that relay the message to the neuron's nucleus,
where it activates certain genes, or to the end of the axon, where it passes
to other cells. This messaging system involves a number of proteins, and
abnormalities in these proteins or dysfunction at the relay points could
block or garble the message. So could other events and processes in the
cell, such as problems with the system that turns food into energy
(metabolism) or the mechanisms that keep calcium levels in balance. Drug
therapies aimed at these various postsynaptic events are now being explored,
although most are still in the very earliest phases of testing. Several
proposed treatments for Alzheimer's hinge on the theory that free-radical
damage plays a key role in the disease and that antioxidants, therefore,
should be able to slow down its progression.
A free radical is a molecule with an unpaired electron in its outer shell.
Ordinarily an oxygen molecule, like other molecules, has an even number of
electrons in orbit. But the normal process of turning food into energy
metabolism produces oxygen radicals with an odd number of electrons. The
oxygen radical is extremely reactive; it will latch readily onto another
molecule a part of the membrane or a unit of DNA, for instance. When this
happens, it can set off a chain reaction, releasing chemicals that can be
harmful to the cell. Scientists theorize that damage from oxygen radicals
plays a role in aging as well as in diseases ranging from glaucoma to
cancer. In Alzheimer's disease, free radicals are suspects for several
reasons. They attack phospholipids, the molecules of fat in neuron
membranes. All molecules contain amounts of fat in cell membranes. Some
researchers hypothesize that free radicals upset the delicate membrane
machinery that regulates what goes into and out of a cell, such as calcium.
Calcium is a novel aspect is a component of the present invention. Calcium
is the mineral in your body that makes up your bones and keeps them strong.
Ninety-nine percent of the calcium in your body is stored in your bones and
teeth. The remaining 1% is in your blood and soft tissues and is essential
for life and health. Without this tiny 1% of calcium, your muscles wouldn't
contract correctly, your blood wouldn't clot and your nerves wouldn't carry
messages. Cells of the central nervous system possess many different types
of calcium channels. Voltage-dependent calcium channels are involved in many
neuronal functions, including synaptic transmission between neurons. The
present invention utilizes calcium selected from the group; calcium citrate,
calcium carbonate, calcium gluconate, calcium lactate, coral calcium,
calcium hydroxyapatite,
Methylcobalamin or vitamin B-12 is the only form of B-12 used by the central
nervous system. The body normally converts cyanocobalamin, or regular B-12,
into methylcobalamin for use by the nervous system. Methylcobalamin has a
significant, positive, neurological effect with no known toxicity.
Methylcobalamin is considered a methyl donor. It donates methyl groups to
the myelin sheaths that insulate nerves, maintaining integrity, and helps
regenerate damaged neurons. The present invention utilizes vitamin B-12
Methylcobalamin as a necessary component.
The discovery that the neurotransmitter acetylcholine declines in
Alzheimer's disease led naturally to the hypothesis that replacing
acetylcholine could stop the disease. Since that finding, many scientists
have looked for compounds that can increase the levels of acetylcholine,
replace it, or slow its breakdown. This search has taken them into a broader
territory that includes the cells that use acetylcholine and the enzymes and
other proteins that take part in its manufacture or activity; a grouping
known as the cholinergic system. The cholinergic system includes the neurons
that contain acetylcholine and the neurons and proteins that are stimulated
or activated by acetylcholine.
The body can synthesize many building blocks and uses amino acids to help
this function. Protein is extremely versatile in structure as well as
function and is the building block of tissue and muscle mass. It also serves
as the chemical catalysts driving reactions within the body. Every protein
in your body is made up of some combination of around twenty amino acids. A
protein is a chain of many amino acids. The structural versatility in
proteins is due to the fact that any given protein may have as many as 130
amino acids linked one by one together. This means that there are 13020
different combinations of amino acids possible. This means that there are
about 1,900,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 different
proteins that could be made, each serving a potentially different function.
This is what makes proteins one of the most versatile structurally
complicated molecules known. The body needs to have access to all the amino
acids in order to synthesize the proteins and can synthesize about 10-12 of
the twenty amino acids that it needs. The main essential nutrients that the
body needs are essential amino acids, essential fatty acids, vitamins, and
minerals.
Pyroglutamate (also called 2-oxo-pyrrolidone carboxylic acid, or PCA) is an
amino acid naturally occurring in vegetables, fruits, dairy products, and
meat, and seems to be an important flavor constituent in these foods. It is
also normally present in large amounts in the human brain, cerebrospinal
fluid, and blood. Pyroglutamate is known to have a number of remarkable
cognitive-enhancing effects. After oral administration, pyroglutamate passes
into the brain through the blood-brain barrier and stimulates cognitive
functions. Pyroglutamate improves memory and learning in rats, and has
anti-anxiety effects in rats (Pearson and Shaw, 1988). Pyroglutamate has
also been shown to be effective in alcohol-induced memory deficits in humans
(Sinforiani, 1985) and, more recently, in people affected with multi-infarct
dementia (Scoppa, in press). In these patients, the administration of
pyroglutamate brought about a significant increase of attention and an
improvement on psychological tests investigating short-term retrieval,
long-term retrieval, and long-term storage of memory. A statistically
significant improvement was observed also in the consolidation of memory. In
human subjects, pyroglutamate was compared with placebo in a randomized
double-blind trial for assessing its efficacy in treating memory deficits in
40 aged subjects. Twenty subjects were treated with pyroglutamate and 20
with placebo over a period of 60 days. Memory functions were evaluated at
baseline and after 60 days of treatment by means of a battery made up of six
memory tasks. The results show that pyroglutamate is effective in improving
verbal memory functions in subjects affected by age-related memory decline.
Some people use arginine, a single amino acid that causes the pituitary
gland to release one's own natural growth hormone. Arginine pyroglutamate,
in addition to having cognitive enhancing effects, is an excellent growth
hormone releaser because it is carried more efficiently across the
blood-brain barrier than L-arginine alone.
Some people suffering from ailments such as diabetes and HIV may notice
unpleasant side effects from the combination of L-arginine and pyroglutamate.
A novel and surprising aspect of the present invention that the emu oil
neutralizes and buffers any adverse effects.
Most amino acids, with the exception of glycine, can appear in two forms
called the D- and L-forms. Each form is a reversed mirror image of the
other. Amino acids in the L-form are the natural form of amino acids found
in living plant and animal tissues, and are considered to be more compatible
to human biochemistry than the D-forms, with the exception of
D-phenylalanine, which is beneficial. All amino acids used in human protein
structures are of the L-form, with the exception of phenylalanine, which can
also appear as DL-phenylalanine.
L-Arginine, also just called Arginine, has appeared in many products of the
past couple of years, gaining popularity as a nonprescription treatment for
high cholesterol L-arginine is a non-essential amino acid which is abundant
in protamines and histones, these are proteins associated with nucleic
acids.
L-arginine is found in: whole-wheat, rice, nuts, seeds, corn, soy, grapes,
coco, carob and some other foods. It can be purchased from pharmacies. L-Arginine
having the chemical composition of C6-H14-N4-O2
Health food and vitamin stores also offer various products containing
pyroglutamate. Arginine pyroglutamate (one source of pyroglutamate) is often
used for its growth-hormone releasing effect, but is still effective as a
cognitive enhancer in this form. Other names for Pyroglutamate include
Alpha-aminoglutaric acid lactam, Glutamic acid lactam, Glutimic acid,
Glutiminic acid, PyroGlu, Pyroglutamic acid. Other names for Arginine
Pyroglutamate include Adjuvant, Piraglutargine, and Arginine Pidolate.
A combination teaching L-arginine and pyroglutamate U.S. Pat. No. 4,388,325
Orzalesi Jun. 14, 1983 and is hereby incorporated as reference. Orzalesi
teaches L-arginine D,L-pyroglutamate has a tonic activity at the neuro-endocrinal
level with a specific effect in enhancing sexual behavior of Mammalia males,
particularly in individuals of elderly age, humans being included.
While substances pass easily from the bloodstream to cells in other parts of
the body, the brain has a complex set of defenses that protect it from
possible poisons. Known as the blood-brain barrier, these defenses include
physical barriers, which can be described as tightly opposed cells in the
walls of the blood vessels. Another defense is chemical; enzymes that act as
gatekeepers, escorting only certain substances into the inner compartments.
The present invention of the emu oil composition is another way to cross the
blood brain barrier to deliver drugs, nutrients and supplements to the
neurons and act as a carrier fluid.
The present invention includes linoleic acid and linolenic acid and which
when transferred to the lipid layer may be crucial to "feeding" cells,
thereby creating more energy for cells to burn, thus enhancing membrane cell
proliferation and fortification, Linoleic acid and linolenic acid is
required for the formation and maintenance cells and of the epidermal
barrier.
The present invention is contemplated as a sterile formulation. The guidance
on validation of the manufacture of sterile products can be found in the
FDA's submission Documentation for Sterilization Process Validation for
Human and Veterinary Drug Products (November 1994), which is hereby
incorporated by reference.
It is conceived that this formula can be modified to that it is prepared in
the form of a gel, a cream, a lotion, a spray, a patch, or an enhanced oil.
Information regarding the use of fatty acids and certain natural oils for
lowering cholesterol and treating conditions related to cholesterol
metabolism, including, but not limited to, dosages of fatty acids and fat
emulsions and forms of administration, are known to those with skill in the
art as illustrated by the United States Patents Incorporated herein by
reference. The following United States patents are incorporated herein by
reference: Winitz U.S. Pat. No. 3,849,554; DiTuio U.S. Pat. No. 3,969,508;
Iwamura U.S. Pat. No. 4,472,432; Revici U.S. Pat. No. 4,513,008; Burger U.S.
Pat. No. 4,603,142; Ward U.S. Pat. No. 4,678,808; Revici U.S. Pat. No.
4,851,437, Beyer U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,920,123 and 5,110,817; Berger U.S. Pat.
No. 4,999,380; Wakabayashi U.S. Pat. No. 5,034,414; Hidvegi U.S. Pat. No.
5,277,910; Mattson U.S. Pat. No. 4,034,083, reissue No. 33,885 and Jandacek
U.S. Pat. No. 4,005,195, reissue No. 33,996, regarding the information
referred to in the preceding sentence and the subject matter encompassed by
these patents.
The present invention is a supplement for treatment of symptoms of
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, manic depression, and bi-polar disease and as
a surprising and novel aspect naturally lowers the bad cholesterol, or low
density lipoprotein [LDL] cholesterol -25%. Serum cholesterol is a major
risk factor for heart disease and the leading cause of death in the U.S.
Cholesterol lowering drugs are the major pharmaceutical products sold. A
product that could naturally reduce serum cholesterol levels without
pharmaceutical drugs would be beneficial. The composition is made of given
weight percents of emu oil, L-arginine, pyroglutamate, B-12 methylcobalamin,
and calcium. The emu oil further includes a naturally occurring linolenic
and linoleic acids, which are intrinsic to the emu oil. The supplement is
adapted for absorbing into the gut, entering the central nervous system,
thereby crossing the blood brain barrier, thereby fortifying the
phospholipids in neurotransmitters of a brain to increase cell proliferation
for treatment of symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, dementia, manic
depression, and bi-polar disease, while reducing overall cholesterol levels.
Claim 1 of 8 Claims
1. A method for treating inflammation of brain tissue associated with
Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and combinations thereof,
comprising the steps of:
a. preparing a supplement comprising:
i. from about 20 wt % to about 70 wt % emu oil, wherein the emu oil
further comprises from about 1 wt % to about 12 wt % linolenic acid;
ii. from about 5 wt % to about 30 wt % l-arginine;
iii. from about 5 wt % to about 30 wt % pyroglutamate;
iv. from about 0.5 wt % to about 20 wt % B-12 methylcobalamin; and
v. from about 0.5 wt % to about 20 wt % calcium;
b. administering the supplement to a patient, wherein the supplement
reduces inflammation of brain tissue and fortifies phospholipids in
neurotransmitters to increase cell poliferation for treatment of symptoms
of Alzheimer's disease, dementia, depression, and combinations thereof.
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