Insulin Peptides as Mediators of the Impact of Life Style in Alzheimer's disease
Autor: | Andrea Santi, Agudo Fernández, I. Torres Aleman |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
medicine.medical_specialty Insulin peptides life-style risk of Alzheimer disease medicine.medical_treatment Disease Review sleep/wake cycle 03 medical and health sciences stress 0302 clinical medicine Epidemiology medicine General Environmental Science Preventive healthcare Life style business.industry Insulin Amyloidosis medicine.disease 030104 developmental biology Etiology General Earth and Planetary Sciences physical and mental activity Tauopathy business diet Neuroscience 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Brain Plasticity |
ISSN: | 2213-6312 |
Popis: | The search for the cause of Alzheimer's disease (AD), that affects millions of people worldwide, is currently one of the most important scientific endeavors from a clinical perspective. There are so many mechanisms proposed, and so disparate changes observed, that it is becoming a challenging task to provide a comprehensive view of possible pathogenic processes in AD. Tauopathy (intracellular neurofibrillary tangles) and amyloidosis (extracellular amyloid plaques) are the anatomical hallmarks of the disease, and the formation of these proteinaceous aggregates in specific brain areas is widely held as the ultimate pathogenic mechanism. However, the triggers of this dysproteostasis process remain unknown. Further, neurofibrillary tangles and plaques may only constitute the last stages of a process of still uncertain origin. Thus, without an established knowledge of its etiology, and no cure in the horizon, prevention - or merely delaying its development, has become a last-resort goal in AD research. As with other success stories in preventive medicine, epidemiological studies have provided basic knowledge of risk factors in AD that may contribute to understand its etiology. Disregarding old age, gender, and ApoE4 genotype as non preventable risk factors, there are diverse life-style traits - many of them closely related to cardiovascular health, that have been associated to AD risk. Most prominent among them are diet, physical and mental activity, exposure to stress, and sleep/wake patterns. We argue that all these life-style factors engage insulinergic pathways that affect brain function, providing a potentially unifying thread for life-style and AD risk. Although further studies are needed to firmly establish a link between faulty insulinergic function and AD, we herein summarize the evidence that this link should be thoroughly considered. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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