Hendrie Hugh C, Murrell Jill, Gao Sujuan, Unverzagt Fredrick W, Ogunniyi Adesola, Hall Kathleen S
Department of Psychiatry, and Center for Aging Research, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2006 Jul-Sep;20(3 Suppl 2):S42-6. doi: 10.1097/00002093-200607001-00005.
Epidemiologic studies on dementia generally have 2 major interacting objectives: descriptive, where rates of dementia and Alzheimer Disease (AD) are calculated for communities and selected populations, and analytic, which attempt to explain the observed phenotypic variations in communities and populations by identifying disease risk factors. The public health benefits derived from descriptive studies are exemplified by the recent published review of the global prevalence of dementia under the auspices of Alzheimer Disease International. This review emphasized the enormous and growing burden associated with dementia particularly for countries in the developing world and outlined strategies to influence policy making, planning, and healthcare allocation. One interesting feature of descriptive studies on dementia is that although the few epidemiologic studies conducted in Africa suggest that rates of dementia and AD are relatively low, rates of AD and dementia have been reported to be relatively high for African Americans. The Indianapolis-Ibadan Dementia Project has reported that the incidence rates for AD and dementia in Yoruba are less than half the incidence rates for AD and dementia in African Americans. Analytic studies are now underway to identify risk factors that may account for these rate differences. The risk factor model being applied, attempts to identify not only putative genetic and environmental factors but also their interactions. So far the major findings have included: apolipoprotein E e4, a major risk factor for AD in most populations, is also a risk factor for AD in African Americans but not for Yoruba; African Americans are at higher risk not only for AD, but also for diseases associated with increased cardiovascular risk such as hypertension, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome; African Americans have higher rates of hypercholesterolemia than Yoruba: there is an interaction between apolipoprotein E e4, cholesterol, and AD risk in both Yoruba and African Americans. We eventually hope to create a risk factor model that will not only account for the dementia rate differences between Yoruba and African Americans, but also help explain dementia rates in other developing and developed countries.
描述性目标,即计算社区和特定人群中痴呆症和阿尔茨海默病(AD)的发病率;分析性目标,即通过识别疾病风险因素来解释社区和人群中观察到的表型变异。描述性研究带来的公共卫生益处体现在最近由国际阿尔茨海默病协会主持发表的关于全球痴呆症患病率的综述中。该综述强调了痴呆症带来的巨大且不断增加的负担,尤其是对发展中国家而言,并概述了影响政策制定、规划和医疗资源分配的策略。痴呆症描述性研究的一个有趣特点是,尽管在非洲进行的少数流行病学研究表明痴呆症和AD的发病率相对较低,但据报道非裔美国人的AD和痴呆症发病率相对较高。印第安纳波利斯 - 伊巴丹痴呆症项目报告称,约鲁巴人AD和痴呆症的发病率不到非裔美国人的一半。目前正在进行分析性研究,以确定可能导致这些发病率差异的风险因素。所应用的风险因素模型不仅试图识别假定的遗传和环境因素,还试图识别它们之间的相互作用。到目前为止,主要发现包括:载脂蛋白E e4是大多数人群中AD的主要风险因素,在非裔美国人中也是AD的风险因素,但在约鲁巴人中不是;非裔美国人不仅患AD的风险更高,而且患与心血管疾病风险增加相关的疾病(如高血压、糖尿病和代谢综合征)的风险也更高;非裔美国人的高胆固醇血症发病率高于约鲁巴人:在约鲁巴人和非裔美国人中,载脂蛋白E e4、胆固醇与AD风险之间存在相互作用。我们最终希望创建一个风险因素模型,该模型不仅能够解释约鲁巴人和非裔美国人之间痴呆症发病率的差异,还能帮助解释其他发展中国家和发达国家的痴呆症发病率。