detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1078...

Tema
Guideline
Autor
Liu, Jie van Beusekom, Heleen Bu, Xian‐Le Chen, Gong Henrique Rosado de Castro, Paulo Chen, Xiaochun Chen, Xiaowei Clarkson, Andrew N. Farr, Tracy D. Fu, Yuhong Jia, Jianping Jolkkonen, Jukka Kim, Woojin Scott Korhonen, Paula Li, Shen Liang, Yajie Liu, Guang‐Hui Liu, Guiyou Liu, Yu‐Hui Malm, Tarja Mao, Xiaobo Oliveira, Joaquim Miguel Modo, Mike M. Ramos‐Cabrer, Pedro Ruscher, Karsten Song, Weihong Wang, Jun Wang, Xuanyue Wang, Yun Wu, Haitao Xiong, Lize Yang, Yi Ye, Keqiang Yu, Jin‐Tai Zhou, Xin‐Fu Zille, Marietta Masters, Colin L. Walczak, Piotr Boltze, Johannes Ji, Xunming Wang, Yan‐Jiang
Langue
en
Editor

John Wiley and Sons Inc.

Categoría

Wiley-Blackwell Online Open

Año

2023

fecha de cotización

11/6/2024

Palabras clave
research neuroprotective disease neurodegeneration alzheimer ad
Métrico

Resumen

The global trend toward aging populations has resulted in an increase in the occurrence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and associated socioeconomic burdens.

Abnormal metabolism of amyloid‐β (Aβ) has been proposed as a significant pathomechanism in AD, supported by results of recent clinical trials using anti‐Aβ antibodies.

Nonetheless, the cognitive benefits of the current treatments are limited.

The etiology of AD is multifactorial, encompassing Aβ and tau accumulation, neuroinflammation, demyelination, vascular dysfunction, and comorbidities, which collectively lead to widespread neurodegeneration in the brain and cognitive impairment.

Hence, solely removing Aβ from the brain may be insufficient to combat neurodegeneration and preserve cognition.

To attain effective treatment for AD, it is necessary to (1) conduct extensive research on various mechanisms that cause neurodegeneration, including advances in neuroimaging techniques for earlier detection and a more precise characterization of molecular events at scales ranging from cellular to the full system level; (2) identify neuroprotective intervention targets against different neurodegeneration mechanisms; and (3) discover novel and optimal combinations of neuroprotective intervention strategies to maintain cognitive function in AD patients.

The Alzheimer's Disease Neuroprotection Research Initiative's objective is to facilitate coordinated, multidisciplinary efforts to develop systemic neuroprotective strategies to combat AD.

The aim is to achieve mitigation of the full spectrum of pathological processes underlying AD, with the goal of halting or even reversing cognitive decline.

Liu, Jie,van Beusekom, Heleen,Bu, Xian‐Le,Chen, Gong,Henrique Rosado de Castro, Paulo,Chen, Xiaochun,Chen, Xiaowei,Clarkson, Andrew N.,Farr, Tracy D.,Fu, Yuhong,Jia, Jianping,Jolkkonen, Jukka,Kim, Woojin Scott,Korhonen, Paula,Li, Shen,Liang, Yajie,Liu, Guang‐Hui,Liu, Guiyou,Liu, Yu‐Hui,Malm, Tarja,Mao, Xiaobo,Oliveira, Joaquim Miguel,Modo, Mike M.,Ramos‐Cabrer, Pedro,Ruscher, Karsten,Song, Weihong,Wang, Jun,Wang, Xuanyue,Wang, Yun,Wu, Haitao,Xiong, Lize,Yang, Yi,Ye, Keqiang,Yu, Jin‐Tai,Zhou, Xin‐Fu,Zille, Marietta,Masters, Colin L.,Walczak, Piotr,Boltze, Johannes,Ji, Xunming,Wang, Yan‐Jiang, 2023, Preserving cognitive function in patients with Alzheimer's disease: The Alzheimer's disease neuroprotection research initiative (ADNRI), John Wiley and Sons Inc.

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