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Is anti-cholinesterase therapy of Alzheimers disease delaying progression?

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Is anti-cholinesterase therapy of Alzheimers disease delaying progression?

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Giacobini E University Hospitals of Geneva, Department of Geriatrics, University of Geneva Medical School, Thonex-Geneva, Switzerland. Ezio.Giacobini@hcuge.ch During the last decade, a systematic effort to develop a pharmacological treatment for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) resulted in three drugs being registered for the first time in the US and Europe. All three compounds are cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEI). The major therapeutic effect of ChEI on AD patients is to maintain cognitive function at a stable level during a 6-month to 1-year period of treatment, as compared to placebo. Additional drug effects are to slow down cognitive deterioration and improve behavioral and daily living activity. Recent studies show that in many patients the cognitive stabilization effect can be prolonged up to 24 months. This long-lasting effect suggests a mechanism of action other than symptomatic, and directly cholinergic. In vitro and in vivo studies have consistently demonstrated a link between cholin

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