Researchers say that methylene blue, a chemical commonly used by aquarium hobbyists, may offer a promising new way to treat memory disorders like Alzheimer's and dementia.
Their findings, , show that small oral doses of the drug improved memory and brain function in a small number of healthy test subjects.
"We're very excited about it," lead researcher Dr. Timothy Duong, a professor of ophthalmology and radiology at the University of Texas Health Science Center, told Â鶹ӰÊÓ.
"If this is proven true, then we have potential to at least slow down progressions of memory disorders."
Duong is hoping to conduct further research.
Methylene blue was first used to treat malaria in the 1890s. Since then, the compound has been used to fight everything from psoriasis to West Nile virus to hepatitis C. Today, it's commonly prescribed to patients with certain blood disorders and psychiatric conditions like schizophrenia. It has also been used as a dye and is sold commercially as an easy way to treat fungal infections in aquarium fish.
There is now growing interest in understanding methylene blue's ability to energize and protect brain cells from damage, making it a potential therapy for strokes, brain injuries and even mental health conditions.
At Dalhousie University, a found that it can also be an effective and inexpensive add-on treatment for bipolar disorder.
"The patients who were taking the medication felt less depressed," psychiatry professor Dr. Martin Alda told Â鶹ӰÊÓ.
"They felt significantly also less anxious and many of them subjectively felt that their thinking was also more clear."
The drug was put into pill form for patients by a compounding pharmacy. When the Dalhousie study ended, some patients – like 54-year-old Lemuel Boutilier – asked to stay on the drug.
"Methylene blue has changed my life and I can't say that enough," Boutilier said.
For two decades, Boutilier has struggled with the ups and downs of bipolar disorder, despite taking a host of medications. Methylene blue, Boutilier says, has brought him stability.
"It has reduced the amount of medication that I'm on because it allows a calmness to develop and it cuts down on agitation and depression."
Some researchers think the drug helps brain cells work with renewed vigour, helping them produce more energy while helping clear disease-causing toxins from the brain – though they don't yet fully understand how it works.
Because methylene blue is an old medication, it cannot be patented and is considered an orphan drug that offers no profit to pharmaceutical companies, so research has been slow. However, some companies are patenting new drugs that contain components of methylene blue.
Doctors say that however encouraging the data, the drug should not be used without medical supervision.
That isn't stopping some.
Joe Cohen has been self-administering the drug to boost his mental performance.
The has of himself taking the chemical.
"I just noticed processing improved," Cohen says. "Short term memory improved -- nothing dramatic… just able to remember more things slightly sharper. So, for these reasons, I continue taking it."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, however, and damaged DNA.
With a report from CTV medical specialist Avis Favaro and producer Elizabeth St. Philip