New Study States Scientist
Fabricated Items In Influential 2006 Dementia Paper
Which Gave Big Pharma Billions In Taxpayer Funding
Confirming Previous Claims
July 29. 2022
My tweet on
Twitter.com
On January 10, 2022, I stated in a
time stamped tweet on the social networking website
Twitter.com, "Echinacea helps brain health and is
good for dementia patients. However, there's still
the
amyloid
problem."
One month after my tweet, a
scientific study was launched regarding the
influential 2006 research report/paper on the
amyloid protein, which big pharma used to gain
billions of dollars in taxpayer funding from world
governments, then revenues for dementia drugs. This
week it was revealed the 2006 research report/paper
was "fraudulent" and contained "fabricated" and
"manipulated" data, which benefited big pharma.
As stated previously on the site, I
have been doing scientific research work for years
regarding cancer, HIV/AIDS, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's
and Sickle Cell, among other items. I've published
items to this site that proved 100% true and
correct, even on matters of disease (see:
Site Exclusives).
By the grace of God my research work
has been going extraordinarily well. However, it is
being criminally impeded by criminals in Hollywood
and those helping them at the FBI, in illegal
conduct costing people their health and lives [The FBI Is
Stonewalling Congress On Releasing FBI File In
Madonna Human Rights Abuse Case (Congressional
Documents)].
I'd have already fully produced and
released the pharmaceutical drugs and medical
inventions I've developed had these vile criminals
in Hollywood and the FBI not criminally interfered,
due to their sick, greedy obsession with stealing
entertainment copyrights I'd written years prior to
the forthcoming pharmaceutical patents (songs, music
videos, movie scripts/synopsis, books, ect).
Vile pop singer, Madonna, and her
cronies began stealing copies of these items I'd
registered in the Library of Congress years prior,
then through a bribe she issued, the FBI began
helping her and Hollywood commit these serious
intellectual property crimes, which is their way (Former FBI
Directors Robert Mueller And James Comey
Criminally Defrauded Florida Submarine Company
Out Of Billions Of Dollars In Copyrights And
Patents To Benefit Former Employer Lockheed
Martin Then Stonewalled Congress Regarding It
and
The FBI Sued For Stealing Hundreds
Of Millions Of Dollars In Civil War Era Gold).
I've also been doing research work
on the climate issue and items I stated proved true
( 'Doomsday Glacier' In Antarctica
Under Imminent Risk Of Collapse Confirming Previous Claims
and
Yellowstone Floods In Unprecedented
Climate Event Confirming Previous Site Claims).
My tweets on
Twitter.com
Lack of funding has been a big
problem after Madonna with the help of the FBI stole
my aforementioned copyrights and $500,000 home
through criminal fraud (and blacklisted me from
working in the entertainment industry in America).
However, I've made a lot of sacrifices these past
few years and have been saving my money, and will
get my pharmaceutical drugs and medical inventions
completed and released. I've never given up and will
not for any reason.
Currently, I'm working under
terrible conditions in Miami, where I'm being
criminally harassed by Hollywood and the FBI. My
life has been threatened. They made murder attempts.
My computers and other equipment I use to do my
science research work/forthcoming patents has
repeatedly and deliberately been damaged and some
destroyed, during break-ins to my home and via
malicious hacks over the internet).
I've stated it before and I shall
again. They don't want you to get well, as there is
more money in the public being sick (meaning repeat
customers). As stated previously on the site, a
group of people affiliated with the Obama
Administration (and are now connected to the
Biden Administration) threatened me over my
science research work/forthcoming patents, angrily
stating "we don't want anything cured" because
people being sick is a "lucrative business" in
"America." I'm not going to stop my work
though. So you can take your threats and shove them
up your ugly, corrupt backsides...
STORY SOURCE
Critical elements of leading Alzheimer’s study
possibly fraudulent
Sat 23 Jul 2022 12.57 EDT - Last
modified on Sat 23 Jul 2022 12.59 EDT - The highly
influential paper, first published in 2006, has
helped guide billions of dollars in US federal
research into the disease. Critical elements of one
of the most cited pieces of Alzheimer’s disease
research in the last two decades may have been
purposely manipulated, according to a report in
Science.
Alzheimer’s is the most common cause
of dementia globally, according to the World Health
Organization. The highly influential paper, which
was published in Nature in 2006, has helped guide
billions of dollars in US federal government
research into Alzheimer’s, according to Science.
The study, which looked at cognitive
decline in mice, proposed that a specific
amyloid
protein may be responsible for cognitive decline.
The hypothesis has since dominated the field, and
researchers have worked for years to understand the
mechanism by which such proteins may lead to
decline.
But a neuroscientist in Tennessee,
Vanderbilt University professor Matthew Schrag, said
in a Science article that he and other reviewers
have identified as many as 10 papers on the protein
that deserve deeper scrutiny. The report also cited
other prominent researchers who have had difficulty
replicating results of the studies on the specific
proteins.
“I focus on what we can see in the
published images, and describe them as red flags,
not final conclusions,” he told Science, when
revealing his role as a whistleblower. “The data
should speak for itself.”
The heart of the matter is whether
images in multiple papers were manipulated to better
support a hypothesis, with the work of researcher
Sylvain Lesné under particular examination. Lesné,
an associate professor at the University of
Minnesota, is now under investigation by the
university.
https://www.theguardian.com
Blots on a field? A neuroscience image sleuth
finds signs of fabrication in scores of Alzheimer’s
articles, threatening a reigning theory of the
disease
21 Jul 2022 - Neuroscientist and
physician Matthew Schrag found suspect images in
dozens of papers involving Alzheimer’s disease,
including Western blots (projected in green)
measuring a protein linked to cognitive decline in
rats.
In August 2021, Matthew Schrag, a
neuroscientist and physician at Vanderbilt
University, got a call that would plunge him into a
maelstrom of possible scientific misconduct. A
colleague wanted to connect him with an attorney
investigating an experimental drug for Alzheimer’s
disease called Simufilam. The drug’s developer,
Cassava Sciences, claimed it improved cognition,
partly by repairing a protein that can block sticky
brain deposits of the protein
amyloid
beta (Aβ), a hallmark of Alzheimer’s. The attorney’s
clients—two prominent neuroscientists who are also
short sellers who profit if the company’s stock
falls—believed some research related to Simufilam
may have been “fraudulent,” according to a petition
later filed on their behalf with the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA).
Schrag, 37, a softspoken,
nonchalantly rumpled junior professor, had already
gained some notoriety by publicly criticizing the
controversial FDA approval of the anti-Aβ drug
Aduhelm. His own research also contradicted some of
Cassava’s claims. He feared volunteers in ongoing
Simufilam trials faced risks of side effects with no
chance of benefit.
So he applied his technical and
medical knowledge to interrogate published images
about the drug and its underlying science—for which
the attorney paid him $18,000. He identified
apparently altered or duplicated images in dozens of
journal articles. The attorney reported many of the
discoveries in the FDA petition, and Schrag sent all
of them to the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
which had invested tens of millions of dollars in
the work.
But Schrag’s sleuthing drew him into
a different episode of possible misconduct, leading
to findings that threaten one of the most cited
Alzheimer’s studies of this century and numerous
related experiments.
The first author of that influential
study, published in Nature in 2006, was an ascending
neuroscientist: Sylvain Lesné of the University of
Minnesota (UMN), Twin Cities. His work underpins a
key element of the dominant yet controversial
amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer’s, which holds that
Aβ clumps, known as plaques, in brain tissue are a
primary cause of the devastating illness, which
afflicts tens of millions globally. In what looked
like a smoking gun for the theory and a lead to
possible therapies, Lesné and his colleagues
discovered an Aβ subtype and seemed to prove it
caused dementia in rats. If Schrag’s doubts are
correct, Lesné’s findings were an elaborate mirage.
Schrag, who had not publicly
revealed his role as a whistleblower until this
article, avoids the word “fraud” in his critiques of
Lesné’s work and the Cassava-related studies and
does not claim to have proved misconduct. That would
require access to original, complete, unpublished
images and in some cases raw numerical data. “I
focus on what we can see in the published images,
and describe them as red flags, not final
conclusions,” he says. “The data should speak for
itself.”...
https://www.science.org