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Common Brain Structural Alterations Associated with Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors and Alzheimer’s Dementia: Future Directions and Implications
Author(s) -
Melissa Lamar,
Elizabeth A. Boots,
Konstantinos Arfanakis,
Lisa L. Barnes,
Julie A. Schneider
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
neuropsychology review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.944
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1573-6660
pISSN - 1040-7308
DOI - 10.1007/s11065-020-09460-6
Subject(s) - dementia , neuropsychology , neurology , disease , psychology , alzheimer's disease , neuroscience , risk factor , clinical psychology , psychiatry , medicine , cognition
Recent reports suggest declines in the age-specific risk of Alzheimer's dementia in higher income Western countries. At the same time, investigators believe that worldwide trends of increasing mid-life modifiable risk factors [e.g., cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors] coupled with the growth of the world's oldest age groups may nonetheless lead to an increase in Alzheimer's dementia. Thus, understanding the overlap in neuroanatomical profiles associated with CVD risk factors and AD may offer more relevant targets for investigating ways to reduce the growing dementia epidemic than current targets specific to isolated AD-related neuropathology. We hypothesized that a core group of common brain structural alterations exist between CVD risk factors and Alzheimer's dementia. Two co-authors conducted independent literature reviews in PubMed using search terms for CVD risk factor burden (separate searches for 'cardiovascular disease risk factors', 'hypertension', and 'Type 2 diabetes') and 'aging' or 'Alzheimer's dementia' with either 'grey matter volumes' or 'white matter'. Of studies that reported regionally localized results, we found support for our hypothesis, determining 23 regions commonly associated with both CVD risk factors and Alzheimer's dementia. Within this context, we outline future directions for research as well as larger cerebrovascular implications for these commonalities. Overall, this review supports previous as well as more recent calls for the consideration that both vascular and neurodegenerative factors contribute to the pathogenesis of dementia.

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