Christos™ Coherence Medicine Series · Neurology & Cognitive Health · Paper 5

Memory Loss and Early Cognitive Decline

Halting the Cascade, Restoring the Signal, and Reclaiming the Mind

A comprehensive framework addressing the critical window of early cognitive decline — where intervention is most powerful and the brain still has sufficient plasticity to respond.

■ Author: Joshua Farrior ■ Christos™ Energy, LLC ■ 2026 ■ Public Research Edition
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⚠ Clinical Disclaimer

Progressive memory loss requires professional neurological evaluation. Some causes of cognitive decline — including vitamin B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism, normal pressure hydrocephalus, medication effects, depression, and sleep apnea — are reversible when identified promptly. Do not delay professional evaluation. No Christos™ device has regulatory clearance. All [HY] claims require experimental validation.

Claim Classification
[EP] Established Principle
[ED] Engineering Design
[PR] Prototype
[HY] Hypothesis

Abstract

Progressive memory loss and cognitive decline represent one of the defining medical challenges of the coming decades. Alzheimer's disease alone affects over 55 million people worldwide, with incidence projected to triple by 2050. Despite decades of research, conventional pharmacology has produced only modest symptomatic treatments — though the past two years have brought the first drugs demonstrated to slow disease progression.

This paper presents the Christos™ framework for early cognitive decline — a five-pillar protocol addressing the neurobiological cascade through targeted frequency therapy, nutritional neuroprotection, metabolic intervention, and sleep architecture restoration. The paper focuses specifically on the critical window of early cognitive decline, where intervention has the greatest potential impact.

Part I: Understanding Memory Loss and Cognitive Decline

The neuroscience of memory, the three causes of early decline, the critical window

How Memory Works [EP]

Memory is a distributed system. The hippocampus acts as an indexing structure — binding together distributed cortical representations that constitute a complete memory. It is the central node and the earliest casualty in Alzheimer's disease. The entorhinal cortex is the primary gateway between hippocampus and cortex — the first region showing tau pathology in Alzheimer's, years or decades before clinical symptoms appear.

When hippocampal function is compromised, the ability to form new memories (encoding) is impaired first — which is why recent events are forgotten before remote ones.

The Three Most Common Causes of Early Memory Loss [EP]

Early-Onset Alzheimer's Disease (EOAD)

Characterized by accumulation of amyloid-beta plaques and hyperphosphorylated tau protein. EOAD (onset before 65) accounts for approximately 5–10% of all Alzheimer's cases. Key biomarkers now include the FDA-approved phospho-tau 217 (p-tau217) blood test, amyloid PET, and hippocampal volume on MRI. The first disease-modifying drugs — lecanemab (Leqembi) and donanemab (Kisunla) — have now demonstrated meaningful slowing of progression in early-stage patients.

Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI)

Caused by cerebrovascular disease including small vessel disease, lacunar infarcts, and white matter hyperintensities. The cognitive profile tends to emphasize executive function and processing speed early, with less prominent memory encoding deficits than Alzheimer's. Blood pressure control is the primary modifiable risk factor.

LATE — Limbic-Predominant Age-Related TDP-43 Encephalopathy

A newly defined neuropathological entity (formally described 2019) estimated to affect 20–40% of individuals over 85. It mimics Alzheimer's clinically but is driven by TDP-43 mislocalization rather than amyloid or tau. It may explain why some patients enrolled in amyloid-targeting trials showed no response.

The Critical Window [EP]

StageClinical StatusIntervention Opportunity
PreclinicalNo symptoms; normal cognitionHighest — pathology present but brain compensating
Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD)Self-reported concerns; normal on testingVery high — self-awareness with preserved function
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)Measurable impairment; independent function preservedHigh — approved treatments available; Christos™ protocol most applicable
Mild DementiaAffects daily function; some assistance neededModerate — slowing progression is the goal

The most important insight in cognitive decline: every year of delay in reaching the dementia threshold is a year of independence, relationship, work, and lived experience preserved. The minimum goal is meaningful, measurable slowing of the progression rate.

What Conventional Medicine Offers [EP]

TreatmentMechanismApproved ForLimitations
Donepezil / Rivastigmine / GalantamineAcetylcholinesterase inhibitorMild to moderate Alzheimer'sSymptomatic only; does not slow progression
MemantineNMDA receptor antagonistModerate to severe Alzheimer'sSymptomatic only; modest benefit
Lecanemab (Leqembi)Anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodyEarly Alzheimer's (MCI + mild, amyloid-positive)27% slowing of decline; ARIA risk; $26,500/year
Donanemab (Kisunla)Anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodyEarly Alzheimer's (biomarker-positive)35% slowing of decline; ARIA risk; monitoring required

Part II: The Christos™ Coherence Framework

Five-pillar protocol for hippocampal field restoration and cognitive decline reversal

The Coherence Model of Memory Loss [HY]

The Christos™ framework proposes that progressive memory loss is a degradation of the coherence of neural signals within and between the brain regions responsible for memory. Memory is not stored in damaged neurons — it is stored in the field of coherent relationships between neurons. When those relationships lose coherence, the memory is not deleted. It is in static. Restore coherence, and the signal can be recovered. [HY]

Memory is not a hard drive deleting files. It is a radio losing signal. The memories are there. The person is there. The signal is weakening. The question is not whether the memories exist — they do — but whether we can help the brain maintain the coherence to access them. [HY]

The Five-Pillar Protocol

Pillar 1
Hippocampal Field Restoration [ED/HY]
The Hippocampal Resonator System (HRS-1) and Delta Sleep Pad (DSP-1) engineering specifications are proprietary. Licensing inquiries through christosenergy.com.
Pillar 2
Neural Oscillation Support [EP/HY]
Pillar 3
Material Support: Neuroprotection Stack [EP]
SupplementDoseEvidence
Lion's Mane Mushroom3g dailyDouble-blind RCT shows cognitive improvement in MCI (Mori et al.) [EP]
DHA Omega-32g daily (DHA-specific)Primary hippocampal membrane fatty acid; anti-neuroinflammatory [EP]
Fisetin (liposomal)500mg dailySenolytic; reduces tau accumulation in Alzheimer's models; crosses BBB [EP]
Quercetin500mg twice dailySenolytic; inhibits tau aggregation; anti-neuroinflammatory [EP]
Phosphatidylserine300mg dailyShown in multiple trials to improve memory in age-related cognitive decline [EP]
Citicoline500mg twice dailyIncreases acetylcholine; documented cognitive benefit in MCI trials [EP]
Magnesium L-Threonate2g dailyOnly magnesium penetrating BBB meaningfully; increases synaptic density [EP]
Bacopa Monnieri500mg dailyReduces neuroinflammation; improves cognition in human RCTs [EP]
Benfotiamine300mg twice dailyReduces AGEs in neural tissue; reduces amyloid and tau in animal models [EP]
Vitamin D310,000 IU dailyLow D3 associated with faster cognitive decline and higher dementia risk [EP]
The Christos™ NeuroFlux Memory Formula integrates these compounds with proprietary frequency imprinting. Formula composition not disclosed. Licensing inquiries through christosenergy.com.
Pillar 4
Metabolic Reprogramming for the Brain [EP]

Insulin resistance in the brain — sometimes called 'Type 3 Diabetes' — impairs glucose uptake in hippocampal neurons, contributing to the energy deficit that drives neurodegeneration:

Pillar 5
Sleep Architecture Restoration [EP]

The glymphatic system clears amyloid and tau from the brain almost exclusively during slow-wave sleep. Sleep deprivation of even one night produces measurable increases in brain amyloid. This is the most underappreciated intervention in cognitive decline prevention:

The 90-Day Protocol

Phase 1 — Stabilization (Days 1–30)

Stop the acceleration of decline by addressing neuroinflammation, metabolic dysfunction, and sleep disruption — the three most modifiable contributors. Establish the full nutritional and lifestyle foundation. Begin the Hippocampal Resonator protocol and 40 Hz gamma audio daily.

Phase 2 — Active Memory Restoration (Days 31–60)

With inflammatory and metabolic foundation established, intensify memory-specific interventions. Add dual n-back training (N=2 daily); memory palace construction; prospective memory training; escalate exercise to include strength training. Add 40 Hz visual flicker.

Phase 3 — Consolidation and Long-Term Maintenance (Days 61–90+)

Establish sustainable long-term practices. Assess functional gains. Establish quarterly blood test panel (vitamin D, omega-3 index, homocysteine, HbA1c, fasting glucose). Annual neuropsychological testing to monitor trajectory.

What Someone with Early Memory Loss Can Do Today

Immediate Action Protocol — Begin Today
1
See a neurologist — the most important step. Request MCI screening, the p-tau217 blood test, and assessment for reversible causes (B12, thyroid, sleep apnea, medication effects, depression).
2
Start aerobic exercise today. 30 min brisk walk minimum; build to 45 min, 5x weekly. Single most powerful intervention; BDNF drives hippocampal neurogenesis. 30–45% dementia risk reduction.
3
Begin Lion's Mane Mushroom. 3g daily with food. Only natural substance with documented NGF stimulation; double-blind RCT shows cognitive improvement in MCI.
4
Add DHA Omega-3. 2g DHA-specific daily (not generic fish oil — look for DHA content on label).
5
Add Citicoline. 500mg twice daily. Increases acetylcholine; documented cognitive improvement in MCI; widely available.
6
Listen to 40 Hz gamma audio 60 min daily. Headphones required; free on YouTube. MIT research documents amyloid clearance via microglial activation; human trials showing measurable cognitive benefit. Zero risk.
7
Fix sleep — this week. Dark, cool (18°C), quiet; consistent sleep/wake times 7 days/week; no screens 2 hours before bed; melatonin 3mg. Glymphatic amyloid clearance only occurs during slow-wave sleep.
8
Get a sleep study if you snore. Untreated sleep apnea doubles dementia risk. Treating it may be the highest-impact single reversible intervention.
9
Eliminate refined sugar and alcohol completely. Sugar drives AGEs and neuroinflammation; alcohol is a direct hippocampal neurotoxin even at moderate consumption.
10
Start Memory Palace practice. Choose your childhood home; place 5 items from today in 5 specific rooms; retrieve them before bed. Activates hippocampal encoding circuits; free; immediate.
11
Schedule social engagement. Minimum 3 meaningful social interactions weekly. Loneliness increases dementia risk 50%. Social cognition networks require use-dependent activation.

Memory, Identity, and What Is at Stake

Of all the conditions addressed in the Christos™ series, progressive memory loss may carry the deepest personal weight. Cancer threatens the body. TBI disrupts function. Memory loss threatens something more intimate: the continuous narrative of a human life. The ability to remember who you are, who you love, what you have lived through — to remain the same person across time.

The critical window matters so much because in the early stages — when a person is still living independently, still connected to the people they love — the brain has sufficient plasticity to respond. Every month of stabilization is a month of relationship, of contribution, of being known.

The memories are not gone. The brain remembers how to remember. Help it find its way back.

References

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  2. van Dyck CH, et al. Lecanemab in Early Alzheimer's Disease. N Engl J Med. 2023;388(1):9-21.
  3. Sims JR, et al. Donanemab in Early Symptomatic Alzheimer's Disease (TRAILBLAZER-ALZ 2). JAMA. 2023;330(6):512-527.
  4. Cotman CW, Berchtold NC, Christie LA. Exercise builds brain health. Trends Neurosci. 2007;30(9):464-472.
  5. Ngandu T, et al. FINGER trial: 2-year multidomain intervention vs control to prevent cognitive decline. Lancet. 2015;385(9984):2255-2263.
  6. Morris MC, et al. MIND diet associated with reduced incidence of Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimers Dement. 2015;11(9):1007-1014.
  7. Xie L, et al. Sleep drives metabolite clearance from the adult brain. Science. 2013;342(6156):373-377.
  8. Mori K, et al. Improving effects of Hericium erinaceus on mild cognitive impairment. Phytother Res. 2009;23(3):367-372.
  9. Iaccarino HF, et al. Gamma frequency entrainment attenuates amyloid load. Nature. 2016;540(7632):230-235.
  10. Slutsky I, et al. Enhancement of learning and memory by elevating brain magnesium. Neuron. 2010;65(2):165-177.
  11. Henderson ST, et al. Study of the ketogenic agent AC-1202 in mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Nutr Metab. 2009;6:31.