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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Contribution of cerebrovascular disease in autopsy confirmed neurodegenerative disease cases in the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Centre

TLDR
Concurrent cerebrovascular disease is a common neuropathological finding in aged subjects with dementia, is more common in Alzheimer's disease than in other neurodegenerative disorders, especially in younger subjects, and lowers the threshold for dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease and α-synucleinopathies, which suggests that these disorders should be targeted by treatments for cerebroVascular disease.
Abstract
Cerebrovascular disease and vascular risk factors are associated with Alzheimer’s disease, but the evidence for their association with other neurodegenerative disorders is limited. Therefore, we compared the prevalence of cerebrovascular disease, vascular pathology and vascular risk factors in a wide range of neurodegenerative diseases and correlate them with dementia severity. Presence of cerebrovascular disease, vascular pathology and vascular risk factors was studied in 5715 cases of the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Centre database with a single neurodegenerative disease diagnosis (Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal lobar degeneration due to tau, and TAR DNA-binding protein 43 immunoreactive deposits, α-synucleinopathies, hippocampal sclerosis and prion disease) based on a neuropathological examination with or without cerebrovascular disease, defined neuropathologically. In addition, 210 ‘unremarkable brain’ cases without cognitive impairment, and 280 cases with pure cerebrovascular disease were included for comparison. Cases with cerebrovascular disease were older than those without cerebrovascular disease in all the groups except for those with hippocampal sclerosis. After controlling for age and gender as fixed effects and centre as a random effect, we observed that α-synucleinopathies, frontotemporal lobar degeneration due to tau and TAR DNA-binding protein 43, and prion disease showed a lower prevalence of coincident cerebrovascular disease than patients with Alzheimer’s disease, and this was more significant in younger subjects. When cerebrovascular disease was also present, patients with Alzheimer’s disease and patients with α-synucleinopathy showed relatively lower burdens of their respective lesions than those without cerebrovascular disease in the context of comparable severity of dementia at time of death. Concurrent cerebrovascular disease is a common neuropathological finding in aged subjects with dementia, is more common in Alzheimer’s disease than in other neurodegenerative disorders, especially in younger subjects, and lowers the threshold for dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease and α-synucleinopathies, which suggests that these disorders should be targeted by treatments for cerebrovascular disease.

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Neuroimaging Characteristics of Small-Vessel Disease in Older Adults with Normal Cognition, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Alzheimer Disease.

TL;DR: An association between severity of vascular brain lesions and neurodegeneration is suggested between older adults with normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment and probable AD.
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Aggregation-induced emission: An emerging concept in brain science.

TL;DR: A review mainly overviews the current state-of-art advances of aggregation-induced emission fluorophores achieving the superb performance in brain imaging and therapy, which facilitate deep tissue penetration, high contrast to autofluorescence and efficient blood-brain barrier (BBB) crossing by rational molecular design and functionalized strategies as discussed by the authors .
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[Twenty-five years of the amyloid hypothesis of alzheimer disease: advances, failures and new perspectives].

TL;DR: Based on the current state of the amyloid hypothesis, perspectives of new multimodal treatment strategies are discussed and insulin-resistance is also one of the links between AD degenerative and vascular processes.
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Inflammatory Biomarkers Aid in Diagnosis of Dementia.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used machine learning with the Random Forest algorithm to select the biomarkers of maximal importance, that analysis identified three proteases, matrix metalloproteinase-10 (MMP-10), MMP-3 and MMP1; three angiogenic factors, VEGF-C, Tie-2 and PLGF, and three cytokines interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-6, IL-13.
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Brain Health—Curbing Stroke, Heart Disease, and Dementia: The 2020 Wartenberg Lecture

TL;DR: The concept of vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) cuts pragmatically through this complexity as mentioned in this paper, which is any cognitive impairment caused by or associated with vascular factors and spans the spectrum of undetected cognitive impairment to full-blown dementia.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Brain Infarction and the Clinical Expression of Alzheimer Disease: The Nun Study

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