Another amazing (terse) post from Ohm. His link t
Post# of 148161
The study is about "α2-Antiplasmin as a potential regulator of the spatial memory process and age-related cognitive decline."
I found this interesting because as I age I've found what feels like weird spatial memory degeneration. If I take a walk going one direction, even if I take it several times, it is then difficult to find my way if I go the other direction on the same walk. Just one example.
The study's results end with "These results indicate that the neutralization of α2AP enhances adult hippocampal neurogenesis and spatial memory retention and recall."
Ohm says that fibrinogen is lowered by Leronlimab, but he doesn't say if Alpha-2 antiplasmin is. But if so, it would seem that Leron might have a role to play in age-related cognitive decline -- not just Alzheimer's decline, but ordinary decline.
To jump ahead a few steps, using the technique learned from Respert known as wild guesswork, maybe if we all take Leron, we will no longer get less mentally capable as we age. Ohm, correct me on these suppositions. TIA.