Doctors watched a woman with late-stage Alzheimer's wake up and start telling stories from her own life. She'd barely said a word in five years.
The patient, a Japanese-American woman in her 80s, had been declining for a decade. For the last five years she communicated mostly in single syllables. She couldn't walk well, couldn't dress herself, couldn't control her bladder. Her family had watched her slip further away every year, the way millions of families do.
Then, under medical supervision and with her caregiver's consent, she was given 5 grams of psilocybin mushrooms. A big dose. She sweated heavily and sank into a deep, sleep-like state.
Around 19 hours later, she woke up and started talking.
Full sentences. Memories from her own life, flowing out for nearly four hours straight. In the days that followed she began recognizing family members again. She dressed herself. She walked more independently, held eye contact, smiled, even cracked jokes. Her bladder control came back. A second, smaller session a month later brought more of the same: humor, emotion, connection.
Now, the honest part. This is one patient. One case report, published in Frontiers in Neuroscience by researchers in Brazil. No brain scans, no standardized cognitive tests, no placebo. The disease itself wasn't reversed, and the gains were temporary. High-dose psilocybin also carries real risks, especially for frail elderly patients, so nobody should try this at home.
But here's why scientists are paying attention anyway. Alzheimer's this advanced was assumed to be a one-way street. This case hints that some of the brain's circuits may still be in there, quiet but not gone, waiting for something to switch the lights back on.
She was never really gone. We just couldn't reach her.
Source: Frontiers in Neuroscience case report by Brazilian neuroscientists, covered by ScienceAlert, The Conversation, and Vice.
HAPPENING NOW: Two people have climbed to the top of the Empire State Building and unfurled a flag on top of its spire.
The unidentified people appear to be wearing masks.
ABC News' Aaron Katersky reports. https://t.co/UXGzh22MoB