A common preservative may succeed where billion-dollar Alzheimer’s drugs have failed.
Cheap, safe, and remarkably practical.
With Alzheimer’s now the sixth-leading cause of death, could the solution really be this simple? 🧵
A food preservative used in sodas and thousands of other products may help improve memory and thinking skills in people with Alzheimer’s disease, raising the possibility that an inexpensive household chemical could help combat the nation’s sixth-leading cause of death.
A recent analysis of clinical trial data from 149 people with mild Alzheimer’s disease found that taking sodium benzoate daily for 24 weeks was linked to better thinking skills and lower levels of abnormal proteins in the blood—one of the disease’s hallmarks.
What the Study Found
Current Alzheimer’s treatments are costly and can come with serious side effects, so researchers tested whether sodium benzoate—a pantry preservative—might do more than fight spoilage.
Participants aged 50 to 90 were randomly assigned to receive either a placebo or sodium benzoate at doses of 500, 750, or 1,000 milligrams daily for 24 weeks.
The higher doses produced the most significant results: those taking 750 or 1,000 milligrams daily showed improved cognitive functions—including orientation, word finding, and word recall—along with reduced levels of amyloid beta proteins in their blood. The greatest improvements were seen in participants with higher baseline levels of the more harmful form of amyloid beta.
“You can think of beta amyloid as molecular ‘debris’ that piles up and jams the brain’s wiring system,” Dr. Thomas Holland, a clinician-researcher at the Rush Institute for Healthy Aging, who wasn’t involved in the study, told The Epoch Times. “Over time, this buildup contributes to memory loss and cognitive decline.”
Holland said the findings suggest sodium benzoate may have supported cognition by altering how the body manages amyloid beta—possibly by clearing more of it or producing less.
However, the researchers noted that the exact mechanism remains unknown.
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How It Might Work
Sodium benzoate is a synthetic preservative widely used in acidic foods and drinks to prevent spoilage.
It’s classified as Generally Recognized as Safe, which means it’s considered safe as long as it’s used as intended.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) permits sodium benzoate in foods and beverages at levels up to 0.1 percent.
Unlike the FDA’s product-based cap, the World Health Organization (WHO) sets the acceptable daily intake level for sodium benzoate at zero to 20 milligrams per kilogram of body weight, providing guidance on how much a person can safely take each day over a lifetime.
For context, an adult weighing about 150 pounds could safely ingest up to roughly 1,300 milligrams per day under the WHO standard.
The preservative does have some controversies. When combined with vitamin C, it can form benzene—a known carcinogen—under certain conditions. Some studies have linked it to hyperactivity in children and possible cellular dysfunction.
In the clinical trial, the food preservative appeared to attack Alzheimer’s disease through multiple pathways, unlike current treatments that focus primarily on removing amyloid plaques from the brain.
Sodium benzoate doesn’t fall within existing Alzheimer’s disease treatments but rather sits somewhere in the middle, with its multi-targeted approach.
Hsien-Yuan Lane, a professor and director at the Graduate Institute of Biomedical Sciences at China Medical University, and corresponding author of the study, told The Epoch Times that the possible mechanisms by which sodium benzoate could reduce amyloid beta levels remain unknown, but alternative mechanisms have been suggested.
The preservative may improve communication between brain cells by blocking an enzyme that breaks down D-serine, a chemical messenger needed for learning and memory. D-serine helps switch on special receptors that let brain cells talk to each other. In normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease, both messenger levels and receptor activity drop, making it harder for brain cells to send and receive signals.
Sodium benzoate may also reduce oxidative stress, which is cellular damage caused by harmful molecules and is another driver of Alzheimer’s disease. Previous research shows sodium benzoate can calm inflammation in the brain’s immune cells and protect neurons by boosting proteins that help them survive stress, repair damage, and form new connections.
In patients with mild Alzheimer’s disease, it has been shown to raise levels of two key antioxidants: catalase and glutathione. These antioxidants help protect brain cells from oxidative stress, which damages brain cells and is thought to play a role in Alzheimer’s progression.
The Pressing Need for Treatment
“Current treatment options for Alzheimer’s disease focus on managing symptoms and slowing disease progression, though there is no cure,” Lane said.
He noted that recent advances in Alzheimer’s disease treatment have shown promise in slowing progression. “However, these therapies can cause adverse effects, including brain swelling and bleeding, and pose practical challenges due to cost and the need for frequent injections and monitoring.”
Holland said that current drugs offer only modest benefits because they target amyloid alone and are approved only for people with mild cognitive impairment—meaning they treat the disease after it has already begun to progress, rather than prevent it.
“The biggest breakthroughs needed are safe, multi-target treatments that address both prevention and treatment of the disease process. Specifically for Alzheimer’s disease, we need treatments that not only target amyloid but also the broader biological changes,” Holland said, adding that it is much like how treating heart disease involves more than just lowering cholesterol.
Holland is a medical adviser and study clinician for the U.S. POINTER trial, a two-year clinical trial testing whether healthy lifestyle changes can protect cognitive function in older adults at risk of decline.
Previous Research
In the current trial, researchers used much higher doses of sodium benzoate than what a person may be exposed to by eating processed foods. A previous clinical trial in schizophrenic patients administered doses of up to 2,000 milligrams per day.
“At first glance, hearing ‘food preservative’ may sound alarming. But it’s important to separate trace amounts in processed foods from carefully studied medical doses,” Holland said.
Still, he noted that the long-term effect of using these doses isn’t yet known, especially since preservatives in the diet can interact with other compounds.
This isn’t the first time researchers have tested sodium benzoate against Alzheimer’s disease.
Small human trials in Taiwan have shown promise. In a 2014 24-week trial of 60 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease, those taking sodium benzoate had greater gains in skills such as remembering instructions, word recall, comprehension, and orientation than those taking a placebo, with no notable side effects.
A smaller trial found similar improvements in skills such as word recall, orientation, and ability to pick up and retain words with repetition, plus changes in brain activity on MRI scans.
Holland said that sodium benzoate is intriguing because it works differently. “It doesn’t just address the ‘debris’ in the brain, amyloid, but also the oxidative stress that damages brain cells. From a patient perspective, taking a pill safely at home would be far more practical than repeated hospital infusions.”
He added that although larger studies are needed to confirm these benefits, the compound has the potential to complement existing therapies or even serve as a safer first-line option.
Experts caution that several key questions remain unanswered. The study measured amyloid proteins in blood, not in the brain itself.
“This is an important nuance. Blood amyloid levels do not perfectly mirror brain amyloid, but trends can be informative,” Holland said.
He compared measuring blood amyloid levels to checking for pollution downstream in a river—lower levels might suggest cleaner conditions upstream, but the connection isn’t exact.
The researchers acknowledged that it’s unclear whether changes in blood amyloid levels reflect actual changes in the brain or spinal fluid. Lane also noted that it’s unknown whether sodium benzoate eaten through diet affects Alzheimer’s risk or progression.
“While encouraging, these findings need to be paired with brain imaging or spinal fluid studies to be conclusive,” Holland said.
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An apple could keep the doctor away in more ways than you’d think.
Researchers found that people who ate one every day were up to 52% less likely to suffer a stroke.
However, it turns out, the key compound hides in a part most people throw out. 🧵
“There’s a reason for the saying, ‘as American as apple pie.’ Apples have been woven into the fabric of American culture for centuries,” Lynsee Gibbons from the U.S. Apple Association told The Epoch Times.
In North America’s early history, apples were a lifeline, providing settlers with food, drink, and a means of survival. Modern research reveals that this humble fruit carries surprising health benefits.
Key Nutrients
“Apples are frequently used as an icon for good nutrition,” said Julie Garden-Robinson, a professor and food and nutrition specialist at North Dakota State University Extension. “At about 100 calories for a 3-inch diameter apple, apples provide fiber, vitamin C, potassium, and other nutrients.”
• Fiber: The flesh and peels of apples contain pectin, a type of soluble fiber.
• Quercetin: A powerful antioxidant with anti-inflammatory properties, quercetin is found almost exclusively in the apple’s peel, and in higher amounts in red apples than in green ones.
• Vitamin C: One large apple with the skin contains about 9.75 mg of vitamin C—just over 10 percent of the recommended daily amount for adults.
• Potassium: A large apple with the skin provides approximately 227 mg of potassium.
A woman covered in melanoma tumors was given one injection—into a single tumor.
Weeks later, every tumor across her body vanished.
It wasn’t luck. It was her immune system learning to fight back.
Here’s how researchers re-trained it to destroy cancer on its own. 🧵
A new class of cancer drug in development shrank the tumors in half of 12 advanced cancer patients in a clinical trial, avoiding severe side effects seen with previous versions of this class of drugs, according to a recent report.
The treatment uses CD40 agonist antibodies, a type of immunotherapy that uses the body’s immune system to attack cancer.
While this drug class has shown promise for two decades, development has been hampered by severe side effects, including widespread inflammation, low blood platelet counts, and liver toxicity—even at low doses.
Systemic Response From Local Treatment
The trial included 12 patients with various advanced cancers, including melanoma, kidney cancer, and breast cancer. Six patients experienced tumor shrinkage, and in two of those cases, the tumors disappeared completely.
The drug’s effects were not limited to tumors that were directly injected with the drug; cancer tumors elsewhere in the body also shrank or were completely destroyed.
“Seeing these significant shrinkages and even complete remission in such a small subset of patients is quite remarkable,” Juan Osorio, study first author and a visiting assistant professor at Rockefeller and a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, stated.
The Real Reason 8 Hours of Sleep Still Leaves You Exhausted
Millions wake up drained even after a full night’s rest.
Doctors say your body may be working instead of healing—burning energy when it should be restoring it.
Studies now link this to early dementia and hidden metabolic damage.
What if your “good night’s sleep” is actually wearing you out? 🧵
For years, Patty Schmidt believed she was doing everything right.
She went to bed by 10 p.m., woke up at 6 a.m., avoided coffee after lunch, and stayed off screens before bed. Yet most mornings she woke up exhausted.
“I thought I was disciplined about sleep, but my body told a different story,” said Schmidt. “I would wake up groggy, push through the day, and crash again by midafternoon.”
Her experience points to a reality millions face: meeting the seven-to-nine-hour recommendation for sleep doesn’t guarantee you will feel rested.
Recent research shows the real issue is not only the length of sleep, but its quality, the body’s internal processes during the night, and whether you’re sleeping at the correct biological time.
High-THC Cannabis Products Linked to Immediate Psychosis and Addiction
Cannabis today is far stronger—and far more dangerous—than most people realize.
Just one hit of high-THC vapes or concentrates can trigger psychosis or schizophrenia symptoms within hours, according to a review of 221,000 people.
Hallucinations, paranoia, and delusions can strike almost instantly—and with THC levels pushing 90%, dependence is nearly inevitable.
🧵 THREAD
As marijuana legalization spreads nationwide and young Americans increasingly view cannabis as harmless, new research reveals a paradox: Modern products such as vapes, dabs, and concentrates with high levels of tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, the main psychoactive ingredient, are triggering serious mental health problems at rates far higher than the marijuana of previous generations.
Using cannabis products with high levels of THC is linked with increased risk for psychosis or schizophrenia, especially within 12 hours after use, a new review of 99 studies found.
Michael Hill at Occidental College accidentally used too little current in his experiment—and stumbled upon a discovery that might replace LASIK with a gentler treatment that reshapes corneas without ever cutting the eye.
The discovery may offer hope for the millions of people living with poor vision who want an alternative to glasses and contact lenses but are wary of LASIK’s risks.
While laser eye surgery is generally successful, it involves cutting into the eye and can cause complications including dry eyes, vision problems, and in rare cases, severe side effects.
A Forgotten Antibiotic Just Shook Up the Lyme Disease Debate
In a pair of new studies, one overlooked drug eliminated Lyme bacteria at doses 100x lower than standard antibiotics—without wrecking the gut microbiome.
Even more surprising? It might prevent infection entirely.
And it's already FDA-approved.
Now the question is… why hasn’t this been used all along?
🧵 THREAD
Scientists may be closing in on two major advances in the fight against Lyme disease: an overlooked antibiotic that eliminates the infection at exceptionally low doses and new insights into why symptoms often persist long after treatment.
In a pair of studies published recently in Science Translational Medicine, scientists showed that piperacillin—a Food and Drug Administration-approved antibiotic—cleared Lyme infections in mice at doses up to 100 times lower than those of doxycycline, the current first-line treatment.
Unlike doxycycline, piperacillin targets the Lyme disease bacteria specifically, sparing the gut microbiome from the disruption that typically accompanies doxycycline use.