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饮食、营养与代谢:驱动阿尔茨海默病病理过程的齿轮组件?

Diet, nutrients and metabolism: cogs in the wheel driving Alzheimer's disease pathology?

作者信息

Creegan Rhona, Hunt Wendy, McManus Alexandra, Rainey-Smith Stephanie R

机构信息

Centre of Excellence for Science, Seafood and Health, Curtin University,7 Parker Place,Technology Park,WA6102,Australia.

Centre of Excellence for Alzheimer's Disease Research and Care, School of Medical Sciences, Edith Cowan University,270 Joondalup Drive,Joondalup,WA6027,Australia.

出版信息

Br J Nutr. 2015 May 28;113(10):1499-517. doi: 10.1017/S0007114515000926. Epub 2015 Apr 10.

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common form of dementia, is a chronic, progressive neurodegenerative disease that manifests clinically as a slow global decline in cognitive function, including deterioration of memory, reasoning, abstraction, language and emotional stability, culminating in a patient with end-stage disease, totally dependent on custodial care. With a global ageing population, it is predicted that there will be a marked increase in the number of people diagnosed with AD in the coming decades, making this a significant challenge to socio-economic policy and aged care. Global estimates put a direct cost for treating and caring for people with dementia at $US604 billion, an estimate that is expected to increase markedly. According to recent global statistics, there are 35.6 million dementia sufferers, the number of which is predicted to double every 20 years, unless strategies are implemented to reduce this burden. Currently, there is no cure for AD; while current therapies may temporarily ameliorate symptoms, death usually occurs approximately 8 years after diagnosis. A greater understanding of AD pathophysiology is paramount, and attention is now being directed to the discovery of biomarkers that may not only facilitate pre-symptomatic diagnosis, but also provide an insight into aberrant biochemical pathways that may reveal potential therapeutic targets, including nutritional ones. AD pathogenesis develops over many years before clinical symptoms appear, providing the opportunity to develop therapy that could slow or stop disease progression well before any clinical manifestation develops.

摘要

阿尔茨海默病(AD)是最常见的痴呆形式,是一种慢性进行性神经退行性疾病,临床上表现为认知功能的缓慢全面衰退,包括记忆力、推理能力、抽象思维、语言和情绪稳定性的恶化,最终导致患者进入疾病终末期,完全依赖他人照顾。随着全球人口老龄化,预计在未来几十年中,被诊断患有AD的人数将显著增加,这对社会经济政策和老年护理构成重大挑战。全球估计显示,治疗和照顾痴呆症患者的直接成本为6040亿美元,预计这一数字将显著上升。根据最近的全球统计数据,有3560万痴呆症患者,除非实施减轻这一负担的策略,否则预计这一数字每20年将翻一番。目前,AD无法治愈;虽然现有疗法可能会暂时缓解症状,但通常在诊断后约8年死亡。深入了解AD的病理生理学至关重要,目前人们正致力于发现生物标志物,这些标志物不仅有助于症状前诊断,还能深入了解可能揭示潜在治疗靶点(包括营养靶点)的异常生化途径。AD的发病机制在临床症状出现前多年就已发展,这为开发能够在任何临床表现出现之前很久就减缓或阻止疾病进展的疗法提供了机会。

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