Alzheimer disease (AD) and cerebrovascular accidents (CVA) are
the two leading causes of age-related dementia. The risk of AD,
stroke, and CVA are known to increase at comparable rates with
age. Recent advances on several fronts suggest that the vascular
risk factors, which are linked to cerebrovascular disease and
stroke in the elderly, significantly increase the risk of AD.
Although some vascular lesions (eg, cerebral amyloid angiopathy,
endothelial degeneration, and periventricular white matter
lesions) are evident in most AD cases, fully one third of these
cases will exhibit cerebral infarcts. Despite the interpretation
of pathological evidence, longitudinal clinical studies suggest
that stroke and AD occur in tandem more often than by chance
alone. Strokes often occur in patients with AD and have been
linked to the pathogenesis of dementia. Nevertheless, the nature
of this relationship remains largely unexplored. Irrespective of
the ultimate pathogenic mechanism, these findings suggest that
managing vascular disease is important in the treatment and
prevention of AD or mixed dementia.Increasing evidence supports the notion that the underlying
mechanism responsible for CVA is also responsible for AD-related
dementia. The implicated pathogenesis, which is primarily
responsible for both disease processes, seems to involve chronic
hypoperfusion. Hypoperfusion appears to induce chronic oxidative
damage in tissues and cells, largely due to the generation of
reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species (ROS and RNS,
respectively). Any condition, which outpaces the capacity of
endogenous redox systems to neutralize such toxic intermediates,
leads to a system imbalance or to major compensatory adjustments
that rebalance the system. This new redox state is generally
referred to as “oxidative stress” and is associated
with other age-related degenerative disorders, such as
atherosclerosis, ischemia/reperfusion, and rheumatic disorders.
Chronic injury stimuli can also induce hypoperfusion in the
microcirculation of vulnerable brain regions.Many common disease risk factors may underlie and play key roles
in the development of cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and
neurodegenerative diseases. For example, it has been widely
accepted that hypercholesterolemia is a risk factor for the
development of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease as well
as AD. Vascular insufficiency/hypoperfusion also is
considered to be a pathogenic factor in the development of AD.
Further, the positive relationship between cerebrovascular
diseases, such as stroke and especially cerebrovascular
atherosclerosis, indicates that the latter may also be linked to
the pathogenesis of AD. In addition, ischemia/reperfusion induce
chronic hypoxic conditions, which cause the formation of a large
amount of oxygen free radicals, which also appear to be a key
factor in the development of these diseases. In support of this
notion, new evidence has immerged, which indicates that
continuous formation of oxygen free radicals induces cellular
damage and decreases antioxidant defenses. The vascular
endothelium, neurons, and glia are all able to synthesize and
release ROS and vasoactive substances in response to certain
stimuli, especially that of chronic hypoxia/hypoperfusion. The
contribution of these substances to the pathogenesis of CVA and
AD is extremely important. The role of hypoperfusion, as a key
factor for vascular lesion formation and which causes oxidative
stress, appears to be widely accepted as an initiator of AD. This
idea is based on a positive correlation between AD and
cardiovascular diseases. ROS are generated at sites of injury
and/or inflammation.The vascular endothelium, which regulates the passage of
macromolecules and circulating cells from the blood to tissues,
is a major target of oxidant stress and plays a critical role in
the pathogenesis of several vascular diseases. Specifically,
accumulated oxidative stress increases vascular endothelial
permeability and promotes leukocyte adhesion, followed by
alterations in endothelial signal transduction and
redox-regulated transcription factors. We hypothesize that the
cellular and molecular mechanisms, by which hypoperfusion-induced
ROS accumulation impairs endothelial barrier function and promotes
leukocyte adhesion, induce alterations in normal
vascular function and result in the development of AD.
Sustained hypoperfusion with concomitant oxidative stress to
brain tissues could also stimulate secondary damage via the
overexpression of inducible and neuronal specific nitric oxide
synthase (NOS: iNOS and nNOS, respectively) and endothelin-1
(ET-1) in brain cells. It is possible that continuous
production of oxidative stress products, such as peroxynitrite
accumulation (via the overexpression of the iNOS and/or nNOS),
may appear to be secondary and accelerating factors for damage
and for compromising the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in
hypoxia/hypoperfusion or AD.One of the main effects of chronic hypoperfusion-induced vascular
abnormalities in AD appears to be tissue oxygen deficiency.
Recent evidence supports a critical role for chronic cerebral
hypoperfusion in the development of cognitive impairments such as
AD. When seen together with AD, accumulating evidence reveals
that a greater fraction of oxygen is removed from the vasculature
in ADpatients as compared to non-AD controls. Therefore, low
vascular blood flow, a prominent feature of the brain during
chronic hypoxia/hypoperfusion, may be a priming (or initiating)
factor in the development and maturation of AD. These metabolic
defects are present before the development of AD symptoms in
apolipoprotein E (ApoE) ɛ4 homozygote patients. De
la Torre proposes that advancing age with a comorbid condition,
such as a vascular risk factor that further decreases cerebral
perfusion, promotes a critically attained threshold of cerebral
hypoperfusion (CATCH). With time, CATCH induces brain capillary
degeneration and suboptimal delivery of energy substrates to
neuronal tissue. Because glucose is the main fuel of brain
cells, its impaired delivery, together with a deficient delivery
of oxygen, compromises neuronal stability because the supply for
aerobic glycolysis fails to meet the brain tissue demand. The
outcome of CATCH is a metabolic cascade that involves, among
other things, mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress,
decreased production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and other
reducing equivalents of (NADH/NADPH), increased calcium entry,
abnormal protein synthesis, cell ionic pump deficiency, signal
transduction defects, and neurotransmission failure. These events
contribute to the progressive cognitive decline characteristic of
patients with AD, as well as regional anatomic pathology,
consisting of synaptic loss, senile plaque formation (SP),
neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), tissue atrophy, vasculopathy, and
neurodegeneration. CATCH identifies the clinical heterogenic
pattern, which characterizes AD because it provides compelling
evidence that any of a multitude of different etiopathophysiologic vascular risk
factors, in the presence of advancing age, may lead to
AD. We hypothesize that, taken together with vascular
endothelial cells (EC) and smooth muscle cell (SMC) abnormalities
induced by hypoperfusion, these are key factors in impaired
tissue oxygen delivery and therefore appear to be main reason for
the development of AD.Importantly, the reduced energy production found in hypoperfusion
may lead to energy failure. This failure ultimately manifests
itself as damage to mitochondrial ultrastructure in the different
brain cellular compartments. Ultrastructural impairments include
the formation of a large number of nonmature or the so-called
“young,” electron-dense “hypoxic” mitochondria and
overproliferation of abnormal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA).
Additionally, these mitochondrial abnormalities are found to
coexist with increased redox metal activity, overexpression of
lipid peroxidation markers, and with RNA oxidation. This oxidative
stress occurs within various cellular compartments, most notably
in neurons and vascular EC, and is responsible for
atherosclerotic damage. Nevertheless, vulnerable neurons and
associated glial cells show mtDNA deletions and overexpression of
oxidative stress markers only in regions proximal to the damaged
vessels which also show the same pattern of mitochondrial
abnormality and oxidative stress marker overexpression. This
evidence strongly indicates that it is chronic hypoperfusion that
induces lesions and causes the accumulation of the oxidative
stress products seen in AD. Determining the mechanisms, which
underlie these imbalances, may provide crucial information in the
development of new, more effective therapies for the treatment of
cerebrovascular diseases, including AD. Therefore, any
pharmacological intervention, directed at correcting the chronic
hypoperfusion state, would possibly change the natural course of
development of dementing neurodegeneration.
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