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Ageing, neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration.

Roberta J Ward, David T Dexter, Robert R Crichton
Review Frontiers in bioscience (Scholar edition) 2015 62 次引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究类型
Review
研究人群
Alzheimer's disease patients
干预措施
Ageing, neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration. None
对照组
None
主要结局
None
效应方向
Positive
偏倚风险
Unclear

Abstract

During ageing, different iron complexes accumulate in specific brain regions which are associated with motor and cognitive dysfunction. In neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease, changes in local iron homoeostasis result in altered cellular iron distribution and accumulation, ultimately inducing neurotoxicity. The use of iron chelators which are able to penetrate the blood brain barrier and reduce excessive iron accumulation in specific brain regions have been shown to reduce disease progression in both Parkinson's disease and Friedreich's Ataxia. Neuroinflammation often occurs in neurodegenerative diseases, which is mainly sustained by activated microglia exhibiting the M1 phenotype. Such inflammation contributes to the disease progression. Therapeutic agents which reduce such inflammation, e.g. taurine compounds, may ameliorate the inflammatory process by switching the microglia from a M1 to a M2 phenotype.

简要概述

The use of iron chelators which are able to penetrate the blood brain barrier and reduce excessive iron accumulation in specific brain regions have been shown to reduce disease progression in both Parkinson's disease and Friedreich's Ataxia.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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