Alzheimer’ Puzzle Solved
Alzheimer's Disease is preventable, and can be cured it in its early stages
No one is immune to Alzheimer's Disease. It has claimed people from every walk of life, including a U.S. president,
professional athletes, entertainers, CEOs, writers and housewives. Experts consider age to be the main risk factor
because it's the one common feature shared by all victims.
This simplistic point of view is wrong. Evolution partnered the development of human longevity with the ability
to remain mentally fit until the highest age. The rapid onset and explosive growth of Alzheimer's Disease in the
21st century, now a worldwide pandemic, cannot be explained by natural aging. It has another explanation.
Over the course of many years, I intensively studied available scientific research, reviewing thousands of reports,
in order to develop a theory for the puzzle that is Alzheimer's Disease. In 2016, I published the
"Unified Theory Of Alzheimer's Disease" (UTAD) for an international audience of researchers and everyone
involved in, or interested in the disorder. UTAD defines what drives Alzheimer's, bringing all known causal risk
factors into a logical, biological context, for the first time. UTAD disrupts several Alzheimer's dogmas and has
far reaching consequences.
UTAD 1: Alzheimer's is a deficiency disease
The global increase in Alzheimer's Disease is due to how humans age, not age itself. Alzheimer's is a consequence
of the modern way of life that is less and less in line with our natural needs, which developed over the course
of the last two million years of evolution. Current lifestyle deficiencies are specifically damaging to the brain center
for lifelong memory and personal experience: instead of growing to its natural potential throughout aging, it shrinks.
In the German bestseller, "The Alzheimer's Lie - The Truth About A Preventable Disease", I offer the lay reader this
important information, why lifestyle factors rather than age cause the disease, in an easy-to-understand format.
UTAD 2: Alzheimer's is preventable
UTAD explains why all deficiencies must be recognized and remedied to effectively prevent Alzheimer's.
Five broad categories of contributing lifestyle factors are identified; all are necessary for ongoing growth of the
memory center. Deficiency in one or more of the factors increases the risk of the disease. The specific lifestyle led
by each person, each with their unique set of deficits, means there are as many causes of Alzheimer's as there are
lifestyles. Individual measures for preventing Alzheimer's, such as increasing exercise or taking omega-3 fatty acids,
fail or are minimally successful because these deal with only one aspect of the risk complex.
Alzheimer's Disease can be prevented by comprehensively addressing all of the deficits for any individual.
UTAD 3: Standard medications cannot compensate for disease-causing deficiencies
A healthy lifestyle cannot be put in a pill. No one drug will eliminate a basic deficit caused by a specific way of life
in the same way that treating a plant with fertilizer won't work if the plant needs water, sunlight and a pot with
enough room to spread roots. Failure to address combined lifestyle deficits is the reason no available Alzheimer's
drug prevents, delays or stops progression of the disease. For the same reason, clinical trials pursuing this approach
will continue to disappoint.
UTAD 4: Curative treatment is possible, but only with a systematic approach
Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease, and a curative strategy that works in its early stages, is possible because the brain
center for memory storage has lifelong potential to grow new nerve cells and renew existing cells.
My bestselling "Alzheimer's Can Be Cured - Timely Return To A Healthy Life", written for laymen and medical professionals,
describes the treatment plan outlined in the original UTAD publication. This led to a growing network of medical
professionals offering my approach to their patients. Individualized treatment plans targeted at the unique set of
deficits for each patient reported success in both the U.S. and Germany, allowing those in the early stages of the
disease to regain the ability to manage their lives as memory improved.
UTAD 5: Education is necessary
These sensational results, curing early Alzheimer's Disease by treating its causes rather than its symptoms, confirms
the UTAD view that it is a deficiency disease. These therapeutic success stories could only have taken place by
self-healing, made possible by eliminating the same causal deficits that will prevent Alzheimer's Disease if adopted
early on.
Through education and fundamental rethinking of what drives Alzheimer's, we can move away from dependence
on drug solutions to empowering healthy choices that will prevent much suffering, of individuals and society,
that characterizes modern life.
About Alzheimer’s
Alzheimer’ Puzzle Solved
Alzheimer's Disease is preventable, and can be cured it in its early stages
No one is immune to Alzheimer's Disease. It has claimed people from every walk of life, including a U.S. president,
professional athletes, entertainers, CEOs, writers and housewives. Experts consider age to be the main risk factor
because it's the one common feature shared by all victims.
This simplistic point of view is wrong. Evolution partnered the development of human longevity with the ability
to remain mentally fit until the highest age. The rapid onset and explosive growth of Alzheimer's Disease in the
21st century, now a worldwide pandemic, cannot be explained by natural aging. It has another explanation.
Over the course of many years, I intensively studied available scientific research, reviewing thousands of reports,
in order to develop a theory for the puzzle that is Alzheimer's Disease. In 2016, I published the
"Unified Theory Of Alzheimer's Disease" (UTAD) for an international audience of researchers and everyone
involved in, or interested in the disorder. UTAD defines what drives Alzheimer's, bringing all known causal risk
factors into a logical, biological context, for the first time. UTAD disrupts several Alzheimer's dogmas and has
far reaching consequences.
UTAD 1: Alzheimer's is a deficiency disease
The global increase in Alzheimer's Disease is due to how humans age, not age itself. Alzheimer's is a consequence
of the modern way of life that is less and less in line with our natural needs, which developed over the course
of the last two million years of evolution. Current lifestyle deficiencies are specifically damaging to the brain center
for lifelong memory and personal experience: instead of growing to its natural potential throughout aging, it shrinks.
In the German bestseller, "The Alzheimer's Lie - The Truth About A Preventable Disease", I offer the lay reader this
important information, why lifestyle factors rather than age cause the disease, in an easy-to-understand format.
UTAD 2: Alzheimer's is preventable
UTAD explains why all deficiencies must be recognized and remedied to effectively prevent Alzheimer's.
Five broad categories of contributing lifestyle factors are identified; all are necessary for ongoing growth of the
memory center. Deficiency in one or more of the factors increases the risk of the disease. The specific lifestyle led
by each person, each with their unique set of deficits, means there are as many causes of Alzheimer's as there are
lifestyles. Individual measures for preventing Alzheimer's, such as increasing exercise or taking omega-3 fatty acids,
fail or are minimally successful because these deal with only one aspect of the risk complex.
Alzheimer's Disease can be prevented by comprehensively addressing all of the deficits for any individual.
UTAD 3: Standard medications cannot compensate for disease-causing deficiencies
A healthy lifestyle cannot be put in a pill. No one drug will eliminate a basic deficit caused by a specific way of life
in the same way that treating a plant with fertilizer won't work if the plant needs water, sunlight and a pot with
enough room to spread roots. Failure to address combined lifestyle deficits is the reason no available Alzheimer's
drug prevents, delays or stops progression of the disease. For the same reason, clinical trials pursuing this approach
will continue to disappoint.
UTAD 4: Curative treatment is possible, but only with a systematic approach
Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease, and a curative strategy that works in its early stages, is possible because the brain
center for memory storage has lifelong potential to grow new nerve cells and renew existing cells.
My bestselling "Alzheimer's Can Be Cured - Timely Return To A Healthy Life", written for laymen and medical professionals,
describes the treatment plan outlined in the original UTAD publication. This led to a growing network of medical
professionals offering my approach to their patients. Individualized treatment plans targeted at the unique set of
deficits for each patient reported success in both the U.S. and Germany, allowing those in the early stages of the
disease to regain the ability to manage their lives as memory improved.
UTAD 5: Education is necessary
These sensational results, curing early Alzheimer's Disease by treating its causes rather than its symptoms, confirms
the UTAD view that it is a deficiency disease. These therapeutic success stories could only have taken place by
self-healing, made possible by eliminating the same causal deficits that will prevent Alzheimer's Disease if adopted
early on.
Through education and fundamental rethinking of what drives Alzheimer's, we can move away from dependence
on drug solutions to empowering healthy choices that will prevent much suffering, of individuals and society,
that characterizes modern life.
"Alzheimer's Can
Be Cured -
Timely Return To
A Healthy Life"
"The Alzheimer's Lie -
The Truth About A
Preventable Disease"
"The Formula Against
Alzheimer's -
Instructions For A
Healthy Life,
Easy prevention
And Timely Cure”