Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
School of Medical Sciences and Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2023;94(1):51-66. doi: 10.3233/JAD-230429.
This review deals with an unwelcome reality about several forms of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease- that these dementias are caused, in part or whole, by the aging of the vasculature. Since the vasculature ages in us all, dementia is our fate, sealed by the realit!ies of the circulation; it is not a disease with a cure pending. Empirically, cognitive impairment before our 7th decade is uncommon and considered early, while a diagnosis in our 11th decade is late but common in that cohort (>40%). Projections from earlier ages suggest that the prevalence of dementia in people surviving into their 12th decade exceeds 80%. We address the question why so few of many interventions known to delay dementia are recognized as therapy; and we try to resolve this few-and-many paradox, identifying opportunities for better treatment, especially pre-diagnosis. The idea of dementia as a fate is resisted, we argue, because it negates the hope of a cure. But the price of that hope is lost opportunity. An approach more in line with the evidence, and more likely to limit suffering, is to understand the damage that accumulates with age in the cerebral vasculature and therefore in the brain, and which eventually gives rise to cognitive symptoms in late life, too often leading to dementia. We argue that hope should be redirected to delaying that damage and with it the onset of cognitive loss; and, for each individual, it should be redirected to a life-long defense of their brain.
这篇综述探讨了几种痴呆症(包括阿尔茨海默病)的一个令人不快的现实,即这些痴呆症部分或全部是由血管老化引起的。由于我们所有人的血管都会老化,因此痴呆症是我们的命运,由循环的现实所决定;它不是一种有待治愈的疾病。从经验上看,我们在 70 岁之前出现认知障碍并不常见,被认为是早期的,而在 110 岁时被诊断为痴呆症则较晚,但在该队列中很常见(>40%)。从更早的年龄预测表明,在 120 岁以上仍存活的人中,痴呆症的患病率超过 80%。我们提出了一个问题,即为什么许多已知可以延缓痴呆症的干预措施中只有少数被认为是有效的治疗方法;我们试图解决这个少数与多数的悖论,确定更好的治疗机会,特别是在诊断前。我们认为,将痴呆症视为一种命运的想法是有争议的,因为它否定了治愈的希望。但这种希望的代价是错失机会。一种更符合证据的方法,更有可能限制痛苦,是理解随着年龄的增长在大脑血管中积累的损伤,以及最终导致晚年认知症状出现的原因,这些症状往往导致痴呆症。我们认为,应该将希望重新引导到延缓这种损伤的发生,从而延缓认知能力下降的发生;对于每个人来说,都应该将希望重新引导到终身保护大脑。