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Brandon S. Klinedinst

Researcher at Iowa State University

Publications -  20
Citations -  117

Brandon S. Klinedinst is an academic researcher from Iowa State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 12 publications receiving 36 citations.

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Cholecystokinin and Alzheimer's disease: a biomarker of metabolic function, neural integrity, and cognitive performance

TL;DR: Higher CCK levels may reflect compensatory protection as AD pathology progresses and be a useful marker of cognitive and neural integrity in participants with normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer's disease.
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Genetic Factors of Alzheimer’s Disease Modulate How Diet is Associated with Long-Term Cognitive Trajectories: A UK Biobank Study

TL;DR: Modifying meal plans may help minimize cognitive decline, and observations suggest in risk status-dependent manners that adding cheese and red wine to the diet daily, and lamb on a weekly basis, may also improve long-term cognitive outcomes.
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Is Cerebrospinal Fluid Superoxide Dismutase 1 a Biomarker of Tau But Not Amyloid-Induced Neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's Disease?

TL;DR: Copper/zinc superoxide dismutase 1 scavenges free radicals that may otherwise damage brain parenchyma and drives Alzheimer's disease (AD) neuropathology in anima...
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Aging-related changes in fluid intelligence, muscle and adipose mass, and sex-specific immunologic mediation: A longitudinal UK Biobank study

TL;DR: Exercise studies in older adults may benefit from assessing sex-specific values of DEXA-based tissue mass, FI, and leukocyte sub-populations to gauge potential cognitive benefits of less VAM and more LMM.
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Inflammation, negative affect, and amyloid burden in Alzheimer's disease: Insights from the kynurenine pathway.

TL;DR: This paper found that inflammatory signaling cascades may occur during Alzheimer's disease, which is associated with increased Kyn metabolism that influences the pathogenesis of negative affect, and the complement system may be critical contributing factors in this process.