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The REAL Reason Scientists Are Wrong About Dementia

The Diary Of A CEO Clips | July 8, 2026



The mainstream theory of Alzheimer’s disease is wrong. That is what Dr. Martin Picard, Professor of Behavioral Medicine at Columbia University, says after examining the evidence. The theory that amyloid plaques and tau tangles in the brain cause Alzheimer’s has driven billions of dollars in drug research for decades.

You can have people in their 60s, 70s, and 80s with zero protein deposits in the brain and full blown Alzheimer’s. And you can have the opposite: people with massive amounts of amyloid plaques and tau tangles and completely normal cognition. Those two extremes, Dr. Picard argues, prove that the protein aggregation hypothesis is not correct.

Discover:
• Why you can have zero amyloid plaques and still have full blown Alzheimer’s
• Why Alzheimer’s may actually be “Type 3 Diabetes” caused by energy overflow
• How the Hadza tribe in Tanzania has almost zero Alzheimer’s or dementia
• Why ketones reach brain mitochondria more easily than glucose
• How a smaller eating window gives you more energy, not less
• Why “breakfast is the most important meal” was a cereal advertising campaign
• The real reason intermittent fasting works (energy efficiency, not calorie restriction)

📺 Watch the full episode here – https://youtu.be/6xlmaorRY0w

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Written by The Diary Of A CEO Clips

Comments

This post currently has 19 comments.

  1. @UAP-japan

    July 8, 2026 at 8:34 am

    砂糖と脂肪を同時に摂取すると脳は快感を覚えます。
    そして依存症の奴隷になります。
    簡単に砂糖と脂肪を取れる食品はなんですか?

  2. @MargyLong

    July 8, 2026 at 8:34 am

    Sorry but I don't know how he relates this to Alzheimer s. I understand the intermittent fasting but listening to him telling me how poorly he was about something isn't evidence that he will notget Alzheimers

  3. @paulblake1164

    July 8, 2026 at 8:34 am

    My dad had dementia and passed away in 2013
    The thing is, it affects people differently; some are stuck in a loop, while others forget where they are or who you are to them.
    It's no easy fix when it's not you, and most of the time, would the average person even know if their own mind was in decline?
    My dad had long-term memory but skipped certain parts of it.
    After he was diagnosed with it, I quickly learned a lot about this illness and the people who work with those who are suffering from it. Most say that if they had a choice between getting cancer or Alzheimer's, they'd take the cancer.

  4. @charlesyateschalfant

    July 8, 2026 at 8:34 am

    It is becoming commonly accepted now that Dimentia, much like Parkinsons and others, starts in the gut. Plaque is definately not the issue. Also, almost 99% of those with Parkinsons and Dimentia suffer from constipation.
    1) Get Sunshine Daily-At least 45 min.
    2) Exersize, even 5 minutes daily of running on the spot or anything that elevates your heartrate.
    3) Puzzles, learning and anything that keeps the brain active.
    4) Be Social.
    5) Diet- Limit sugar as much as possible. The Mediterranean diet. No junk food or processed foods.
    6) Be Happy!

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