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What initiates the formation of senile plaques? The origin of Alzheimer-like dementias in capillary hemorrhages - Source:
Medical Hypotheses, Sep 2008
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What initiates the formation of senile plaques? The origin of Alzheimer-like dementias in capillary hemorrhages - Source: Medical Hypotheses, Sep 2008


by Jonathan Stone
ImmuneSupport.com


08-04-2008

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Although the key pathologies of the demented brain have been known for over a century, and the senile plaque is the focus of intense research, the mechanisms that cause plaques to form are not established.

This paper proposes that the formation of each plaque is initiated by bleeding from a cerebral capillary, which creates the conditions for formation of an amyloid-rich plaque. Specifically, it is argued that ischemia caused by the hemorrhage upregulates the expression of beta-amyloid by local neural cells, and that hemoglobin released into the neuropil binds to the beta-amyloid and promotes its oligomerisation [oligomers interfere with neurotransmission].

The premise that the event that initiates plaque formation is vascular explains:

  • Why the risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease and cardiovascular diseases overlap;
  • Why drugs and lifestyle changes with vaso-protective effects protect against dementia;
  • And why oxidative stress is prominent early in the genesis of Alzheimer-like dementias.

The vascular premise also suggests that the anatomical substrate for the spread of plaque formation is the capillary bed of the cerebral cortex, and provides an explanation of why plaque formation is age-related, occurring as the capillary bed becomes fragile with age.

The more specific premise, that hemorrhage creates the conditions for plaque formation, explains many of the features of plaques:

  • Their small and relatively uniform size, each being the site of a capillary bleed;
  • Why plaques form around capillaries;
  • Why haem [responsible for blood’s red color] is found in every plaque;
  • Why an inflammatory response is prominent where plaques form;
  • Why plaque formation and hemorrhagic stroke commonly co-occur in both sporadic and familial dementias;
  • Why plaques form around vessels in mouse models of plaque formation induced by transgenes that mimic the mutations that cause familial disease;
  • Why the acute petechial bleeding caused by brain trauma can lead to the formation of plaques.

The hypothesis also suggests an explanation of how Alzheimer-like dementias can occur without plaque formation, as when the cerebral capillaries become blocked or constricted in flow, without hemorrhage.

Advances in the prevention of dementia will be gained, it is argued, from understanding of why the cerebral capillary bed becomes unstable with age, and how that instability can be prevented, delayed or slowed.

Advances in the treatment of dementia will be gained from techniques that minimize the neural damage caused by a multitude of tiny strokes.

Source: Medical Hypotheses, Sep 2008. 71(3), 347-359. PMID: 18524497 Stone J. Discipline of Physiology, Bosch Institute and School of Medical Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. [E-mail: jonstone@eye.usyd.edu.au]

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capillary fragility
Posted by: groupie
Aug 13, 2008
This topic grabs my attention as I am trying to understand how it relates to the common side effect of taking hydrocortisone for adrenal insufficiency. I have CFS/ME diagnosed decades ago and now take 20 mg. Cortef daily to manage Addison's disease. I have senile purpura on my forearms regularly and wonder what's going on in my brain and other tissues simultaneoulsy. Considering the chronic encephalitis I've had over the past three decades, I suspect the cerebral capillaries have deteriorated. Nonetheless, my brain seems able to gradually recover after every bout, or perhaps the plasticity allows me to recircuit and compenssate for losses. Any comment? Susan Herzberger
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