| Literature DB >> 34566624 |
Firoz Akhter1, Alicia Persaud1, Younis Zaokari1, Zhen Zhao2, Donghui Zhu1,3.
Abstract
Vascular dementia (VaD) is the second most common form of dementia after Alzheimer's disease (AD); where Alzheimer's accounts for 60-70% of cases of dementia and VaD accounts for 20% of all dementia cases. VaD is defined as a reduced or lack of blood flow to the brain that causes dementia. VaD is also known occasionally as vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) or multi-infarct dementia (MID). VCID is the condition arising from stroke and other vascular brain injuries that cause significant changes to memory, thinking, and behavior, and VaD is the most severe stage while MID is produced by the synergistic effects caused by multiple mini strokes in the brain irrespective of specific location or volume. There are also subtle differences in the presentation of VaD in males and females, but they are often overlooked. Since 1672 when the first case of VaD was reported until now, sex and gender differences have had little to no research done when it comes to the umbrella term of dementia in general. This review summarizes the fundamentals of VaD followed by a focus on the differences between sex and gender when an individual is diagnosed. In addition, we provide critical evidence concerning sex and gender differences with a few of the main risk factors of VaD including pre-existing health conditions and family history, gene variants, aging, hormone fluctuations, and environmental risk factors. Additionally, the pharmaceutical treatments and possible mitigation of risk factors is explored.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; gender; multi-infarct dementia; sex; vascular dementia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34566624 PMCID: PMC8457333 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.720715
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
FIGURE 1Subtypes of VaD that are associated with some of the vascular risk factors and their characterized features.
FIGURE 2Flow diagram showing the search strategy, the number of records identified, and the number of included/excluded studies.
Studies on vascular dementia (VaD) in relation with sex or gender.
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| Male | ≥55.0 (80.3) | MMSE, GMS-B, AGECAT, HAS, Katz’s bADL’s, IADL’s, EURODEM, Risk Factors Questionnaire. | Primary school, High school or higher. Single, married or living as a couple, divorced, or separated, or widowed | Vascular disease (angina, myocardial infarct, and/or stroke), diabetes, hypertension, health status, depression, cognitive status, vascular risk factors (smoking, statin use, body mass index, and alcohol intake) | 1,828 | In men, but not in women, risk of VaD was higher among individuals with anxiety | No description |
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| Female | ≥55.0 (79.8) | 2,229 | ||||||
| Male | ≥65.0 (no average age description about male) | MMSE, GMS, CAMCOG, DSM-III-R | − | Hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, or smoking, apolipoprotein E4 allele | 12,270 | There was no difference by sex in the cumulative risk of vascular dementia. The risk for a 65-year-old woman to develop vascular dementia at the age of 95 years was 0.040 compared with 0.041 for a man. | Age, the square term of age, dummy variables for study, smoking, education, self-reported myocardial infarction, and stroke. |
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| Female | ≥65.0 (no average age description about female) | 16,497 | ||||||
| Male | ≥60.0 (70.1) | NINDS- AIREN, CASI, IQCODE | Less education (<7 Years), Higher education (≥7 Years) | Age, sex, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, stroke, drinking, smoking, education | 845 | Sex and a sex-age interaction showed significant effects with respect to probable VaD, but not to probable or possible AD or possible VaD. | No description |
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| Female | ≥60.0 (72.2) | 2,105 | ||||||
| Male | ≥65.0 (no average age description about male) | NINDS, Association Internationale pour Ia Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neuroscience’s criteria, CDR scale, DSM-III-R | Education (number of years of schooling) | Age, sex, education in years, apolipoprotein E4 allele, hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, Prevalence of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular factors, obesity, stroke, CABG, myocardial infarction | 1,322 | Vascular factors increase risks for AD and VaD differentially by sex. | Adjusted for all covariates listed in the medical risk factors list |
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| Female | ≥65.0 (74.0) | 1,801 | ||||||
| Male | ≥65.0 (no average age description about male) | MMSE, MRI-based evidence of lacunar state or ischemic WMLs, ADL, IADL, HDRS, Stroop T | Education (years) | Sex, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, coronary artery disease, tobacco smoking, atrial fibrillation, neurologic signs, family history, history of depression. | 156 | Moderate mocha coffee consumption was associated with higher cognition and mood status in non-demented elderly subjects with VCI. No description regarding relation of sex. | No description |
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| Female | ≥65.0 (no average age description about female) | 144 | ||||||
| Male | 16–102 (no average age description about male and/or female) | The Cross-Cultural Cognitive Examination and National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association Alzheimer’s criteria | − | Sex, type 2 diabetes, lifestyle, cigarette smoking, and obesity | 2,310,330 individuals, and 102,174 dementia case patients (no separate male and female number description) | Women with diabetes had a 19% greater risk for the development of vascular dementia than men. | Age, race, systolic blood pressure, self-report diabetes; total cholesterol, hypertension, alcohol. |
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| Male | STROBE, ARIC, CARDIA, CHS, FOS, NOMAS. | Education (≤8th grade, grades 9–11, completed high school, some college but no degree, ≥College graduate) | Age, race, education, alcoholic, cigarette smoking, any physical activity, BMI, waist circumference, history of arial fibrillation, LDL cholesterol, antihypertensive medication, | 11 775 | The results of this cohort study suggest that women may have greater cognitive reserve but faster cognitive decline than men, which could contribute to sex differences in late-life dementia. | No description |
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| Female | 14 313 |
MMSE, Mini-Mental Status Examination; GMS-B, Geriatric Mental State B; AGECAT, Automated Geriatric Examination for Computer Assisted Taxonomy; HAS, History and Aetiology Schedule; bADL’s, Katz’s Index for basic activities of daily living; IADL’s, the Lawton and Brody scale for instrumental activities of Daily Living Scale; EURODEM, European Studies of Dementia; GMS, Geriatric Mental State Examination; CAMCOG, Cambridge Examination of Mental Disorders Cognitive Test; CASI, Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument; IQCODE, Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly; CABG, Coronary Artery Bypass Graft surgery; NINDS, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; WMLs, White Matter Lesions; ADL, Activities of Daily Living; IADL, Instrumental Activities of Daily Living; HDRS, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; STROBE, Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology; ARIC, Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study; CARDIA, Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study, CHS, Cardiovascular Health Study; FOS, Framingham Offspring Study; NOMAS, Northern Manhattan Study.
General risk factors of VaD.
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| Genetics | Genetics can cause VaD depending on the presence of certain gene variants. This includes ApoE alleles and TDP43. |
| Obesity | Obesity leads to VaD due to higher blood pressure. Over time this can cause ventricular enlargement and atherosclerosis. |
| Hyperlipidemia | Hyperlipidemia blocks blood flow to the brain which overtime increases the chances of developing VaD. |
| Diabetes | Type II diabetes is highly associated with VaD because of abnormal blood flow to the brain. Type I is associated but not as highly as Type II. |
| Hypertension | Hypertension increases the risk of stroke which is a huge risk factor for VaD. |
| Stroke | Stroke impedes blood flow to areas of the brain. The oxygen deprivation destroys the brain tissue. |
| Atherosclerosis | Atherosclerosis prevents blood from reaching the brain fully. This deprives the tissue of the oxygen and nutrients. |
| Atrial Fibrillation | Atrial fibrillation carries and increased risk of stroke which is directly linked to vascular dementia. |
| Aging | Aging can increase the chance of VaD because there is a higher risk of atherosclerosis, heart attack and strokes. |
| Smoking | Smoking increases the risk of stroke but additionally toxins in cigarette smoke cause oxidative stress and inflammation, both associated with VaD. |
All these factors can overlap and when combined the risk of developing VaD increases.
Percentage of lifestyle influenced risk factors that contribute to VaD.
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| 35% | 40.4% |
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| 28.5% | 8.9% |
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| 16.7% | 13.6% |
FIGURE 3Lipid transport refers to the ability of APOE to bind to LDL receptors and assist with lipid clearance. Certain APOE alleles also interact and affect amyloid deposition, neuroplasticity, neuroimmune modulation and in re-myelination processes.
Shows the various types of environmental factors and their uses.
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| Air Quality | Nitrous Oxides | Combustion, especially in areas of high motor vehicle use |
| Ozone | UV Radiation reactions with oxygen and sometimes nitrogen oxides | |
| Toxic Metals | Arsenic | Industrial use in mining and ore smelting |
| Aluminum | Industrial mining and smelting | |
| Trace Elements | Silicon/Silica | Industrial silicon and silica working introduces fine particles into the air |
| Selenium | mining/oil refining | |
| Work Hazards | Pesticides/Herbicides/insecticides/fertilizers | General farming and crop production, can be endocrine disrupting |
| Solvents/degreasing agents | Industrial grade chemical for various work trades |
Pharmacological treatment for VaD and their effects.
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| Cholinesterase inhibitors | Donepezil, Galantamine, Rivastigmine | Safe and effective in reducing the progression of VaD in addressing the behavioral problems. |
| Vasodilators | Niacin (nicotinic acid), Cyclandelate, Papaverine, Isoxsuprine, Cinnarizine, Buflomedil, Naftidrofuryl, Ergoloid mesylates, Acetazolamide | Have shown to be less effective in treating VaD compared to cortical dementias like Alzheimer’s. |
| Calcium channel blockers | Nimodipine | Moderately effective for short term in treating cerebrovascular disease and other types of dementia. |
| N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists | Nicardipine | Improvement of cognitive deterioration |
| NMDA antagonists | Memantine | Improve cognition consistently across different cognitive scales, with at least no deterioration in global functioning and behavior. |
| Nootropic agents | Piracetam, Nicergoline, Oxiracetam Citicoline, Pentoxifylline | have beneficial effects for patients with dementia in prolonging their survival. |
| Antiplatelet agents | Aspirin, Triflusal, Ginkgo biloba | Reduce/prevent the occurrence of stroke. |