mallucci studied the swimmers over the winters of 2016-2018 — alongside a control group that practiced martial arts beside the pool but never entered it — and found what she was after, as she explained to the test subjects themselves once they warmed up from the effects of hypothermia.
“we compared you to a bunch of people doing tai chi who didn’t get cold and none of them got increased levels of this protein, but many of you did,” she said. “it tells us that cold does induce this protein in humans; you’re the first non-patient cohort to show that cold water swimming raises this protective protein.”
now that the preliminary research, which has been shared in lectures but not yet published in a journal, shows humans can produce the “cold shock” protein, mallucci said the challenge is finding a way to stimulate its production without relying on cold-water immersion. once they find a way to do this, they hope to prove it can help stem the tide of neurodegenerative diseases in humans.
“if you slowed the progress of dementia by even a couple of years on a whole population, that would have an enormous impact economically and health-wise,” she said.
there are over 500,000 canadians
living with dementia today with another 25,000 diagnosed with the progressive disease every year,
according to the alzheimer society. two-thirds of those diagnosed over the age of 65 are women. with the rate at which the disease is growing, it costs over $12-billion a year to care for sufferers. one in five canadians already have experience caring for someone affected by the disease.