Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2010;20(2):355-67. doi: 10.3233/JAD-2010-1374.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative brain disease of the elderly characterized by memory loss, cognition, and behavioral abnormalities. Aging is the single most important risk factor and there is no proven therapy. Aging invariably decreases sensory stimuli and impacts on the thalamocortical system and its connectivity to key brain regions. Memory dysfunction in senescence and early AD, a function of acetylcholine decrease, is accompanied with dysfunctional basal forebrain, parietal, prefrontal, and entorhinal cortices, and indeed hippocampus. Cholinergic neurotransmission protects neurons from amyloid-beta production and its toxicity, while cholinergic depletion enhances both. Available data on sleep disordered breathing and genioglossus dysfunction throw light on possible pathogenetic events leading to hypoxemia. Memory disturbances in normal elderly and early AD patients are intimately related to hypoxia, a reduction in blood supply, and glucose hypometabolism in the hippocampus and a number of key brain areas. The current hypothesis on memory impairment in the elderly and Alzheimer's dementia, therefore, underscores age-related sensory losses, functional disconnection between strategic brain regions in conjunction with hypoxemia and hypometabolism. On the basis of available data, it is emphasized that (A) decreases in thalamocortical function decreases cholinergic activity and cerebral blood flow, while nocturnally, (B) repeated hypoxic events affect respiratory cholinergic mechanism and respiratory regulation. Consequently, the hypotrophy/atrophy of nucleus solitarius and nucleus ambiguous in pontomedullary junction affect hypoglossal nucleus, genioglossus function, upper airway patency, hypoxia, and cerebral oxygenation. These alterations may cause amyloid-beta deposition extracellularly, and neurofibrillary cytopathology in cholinergic and other neurons intracellularly.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种进行性、神经退行性老年脑部疾病,其特征是记忆丧失、认知和行为异常。衰老是唯一最重要的风险因素,目前尚无有效的治疗方法。衰老不可避免地会减少感官刺激,并影响丘脑皮质系统及其与关键大脑区域的连接。衰老和早期 AD 中的记忆功能障碍是乙酰胆碱减少的功能,伴随着基底前脑、顶叶、前额叶和内嗅皮质以及海马体的功能障碍。胆碱能神经传递保护神经元免受淀粉样蛋白-β的产生及其毒性,而胆碱能耗竭则增强了这两者。关于睡眠呼吸障碍和颏舌肌功能障碍的现有数据阐明了导致低氧血症的可能发病事件。正常老年人和早期 AD 患者的记忆障碍与低氧血症、血液供应减少以及海马体和许多关键大脑区域的葡萄糖代谢低下密切相关。因此,目前关于老年人和阿尔茨海默病痴呆症记忆障碍的假说强调了与年龄相关的感官丧失、大脑关键区域之间的功能连接中断以及低氧血症和低代谢。基于现有数据,强调了(A)丘脑皮质功能的降低降低了胆碱能活性和脑血流,而在夜间,(B)反复的低氧事件影响呼吸胆碱能机制和呼吸调节。因此,桥延髓交界处孤束核和疑核的萎缩/萎缩影响舌下神经核、颏舌肌功能、上气道通畅性、缺氧和脑氧合。这些改变可能导致细胞外淀粉样蛋白-β沉积,以及细胞内胆碱能和其他神经元的神经纤维细胞病理学。