Study says people who take Viagra have lower risk of Alzheimer’s

Viagra might help treat Alzheimer’s disease, according to researchers who have been using the impotence drug to study the effects it has on the brain.

Though more studies are needed, researchers in Cleveland found that men who were taking the blue pill, also known as sildenafil, had a lower risk of Alzheimer’s, following analysis of a database of over 7.2 million patients spanning six years, BBC News reported.

The team also reported finding in lab studies that those who took higher than usual doses of the pill — best known for erectile dysfunction — displayed an increase in brain cell growth and reduced protein accumulation.

“Because our findings only establish an association between sildenafil use and reduced incidence of Alzheimer’s disease, we are now planning a mechanistic trial and a phase II randomized clinical trial to test causality and confirm sildenafil’s clinical benefits for Alzheimer’s patients,” research leader Dr. Feixiong Cheng reportedly told the Nature Aging journal.

Until that research is completed, University of Edinburgh Professor Tara Spires-Jones, an expert on brain research, advises people not to “rush out to start taking sildenafil as a prevention for Alzheimer’s disease.”

<p>Viagra boxes are displayed in a pharmacy in this May 2014 photo.</p>

Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Viagra boxes are displayed in a pharmacy in this May 2014 photo.

Dr. Jack Auty, a medical sciences lecturer at the University of Tasmania in Australia, similarly said this is hardly the first indication of a drug that could help with Alzheimer’s, though that has yet to pan out, according to the BBC.

To repurpose an already existing drug would be both a cheaper and overall more efficient path than developing an entirely new treatment for the disease.

Originally meant to treat the heart, Viagra is able to relax blood vessels and subsequently improve blood flow in other parts of the body. This led to its use for erectile dysfunction as well as pulmonary hypertension, which affects the lungs for men and women alike.

Though the exact causes of Alzheimer’s, a type of dementia, are still being probed, it’s known that those who have it have abnormal protein deposits in their brains, BBC reports.

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