In a new study, researchers outline a pulse-pressure-induced pathway of cognitive decline that sheds light on why previous treatments for dementia may have failed and proposes promising new directions for the prevention and treatment of dementia.
The research was conducted by a team at The Brain Protection Company.
Over the last couple of years, a sea change in dementia and Alzheimer’s disease research has occurred.
Focus has shifted from solely targeting amyloid-beta in the brain to the opinion that more fruitful progress could be made by addressing factors that compromise the blood-brain barrier.
Elements of the constellation include chronic age-related inflammation, genetic predisposition, and cardiovascular abnormalities, notably high blood pulse pressure.
Connecting a large and rapidly growing body of evidence, the researchers elucidate how elevated pulse pressure may cause dementia.
Pulse pressure is the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure and commonly increases with age.
The researchers say that elevated pulse pressure in blood traveling to the brain can cause inflammation, oxidative stress, mechanical stress, cellular dysfunction, and cell death in the blood-brain barrier that leads to brain damage.
The link between blood-brain barrier breakdown and dementia is intuitive, as the blood-brain barrier has specifically evolved to support and protect delicate brain tissue by keeping circulating cells, pathogens, and other unhealthy substances in the blood from infiltrating the brain.
There is significant evidence supporting that disruption of the blood-brain barrier is a key driver of cognitive decline and dementia.
The team says that this is an important paradigm shift in our understanding of the pathogenesis of dementia.
Although there are likely several causes of blood-brain barrier disruption, recent human cell culture experiments, animal models, and epidemiological evidence have pointed to high blood pulse pressure as one potential key cause.
Pulse pressure may, therefore, be a promising new therapeutic target for preventing or slowing cognitive impairment, which gives new hope in the fight against dementia.
Moreover, the authors discuss how elevated pulse pressure may have also prevented previous treatment strategies from working optimally against dementia.
For the past two decades, a primary focus of drug development for Alzheimer’s disease, the most prevalent form of dementia, has been to target the molecule amyloid-beta.
The researchers suggest that targeting amyloid-beta alone to treat dementia may be an uphill battle since concurrent elevated pulse pressure will continue to activate the secretion of various inflammatory and oxidative molecules and amyloid-beta from the blood-brain barrier into brain tissue.
Also, stem and progenitor cell therapies have gained a lot of attention as potential strategies to repair blood-brain barrier damage and treat dementia, but chronic inflammatory and oxidative stress due to elevated pulse pressure can impact the health of stem and progenitor cells.
The team says combination therapy has been paramount in the treatment of other challenging diseases, in particular cancer.
Therefore, in dementia, reducing elevated pulse pressure could prove to be synergistic with other therapeutic approaches such as anti-amyloid-beta drugs or stem cell therapy.
One author of the study is Mark Carnegie from The Brain Protection Company based in Australia.
The study is published in Frontiers in Neuroscience.
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