In an article titled, Strong evidence linking Aluminum to Alzheimer’s, recently published in The Hippocratic journal, Exley explained that: “We already know that the aluminium content of brain tissue in late-onset or sporadic Alzheimer’s disease is significantly higher than is found in age-matched controls. So, individuals who develop Alzheimer’s disease in their late sixties and older also accumulate more aluminium in their brain tissue than individuals of the same age without the disease. Even higher levels of aluminium have been found in the brains of individuals, diagnosed with an early-onset form of sporadic (usually late onset) Alzheimer’s disease, who have experienced an unusually high exposure to aluminium through the environment (e.g.
Camelford) or through their workplace. This means that Alzheimer’s disease has a much earlier age of onset, for example, fifties or early…