Mild cognitive impairment: pathology and mechanisms

被引:0
|
作者
Elliott J. Mufson
Lester Binder
Scott E. Counts
Steven T. DeKosky
Leyla deToledo-Morrell
Stephen D. Ginsberg
Milos D. Ikonomovic
Sylvia E. Perez
Stephen W. Scheff
机构
[1] Rush University Medical Center,Department of Neurological Sciences
[2] Feinberg School of Medicine,Department of Cell and Molecular Biology
[3] Northwestern University,Departments of Psychiatry, Physiology and Neuroscience
[4] University of Virginia School of Medicine,Departments of Neurology, Psychiatry, and Geriatric Research Educational and Clinical Center
[5] Center for Dementia Research,Sanders Brown Center on Aging
[6] Nathan Kline Institute,undefined
[7] New York University Langone Medical Center,undefined
[8] University of Pittsburgh and VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System,undefined
[9] University of Kentucky,undefined
来源
Acta Neuropathologica | 2012年 / 123卷
关键词
Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid; Cholinergic; Dementia; MCI; Neurofibrillary tangles; Neuropathology; Molecular; Neurotrophins; Synapses;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is rapidly becoming one of the most common clinical manifestations affecting the elderly. The pathologic and molecular substrate of people diagnosed with MCI is not well established. Since MCI is a human specific disorder and neither the clinical nor the neuropathological course appears to follow a direct linear path, it is imperative to characterize neuropathology changes in the brains of people who came to autopsy with a well-characterized clinical diagnosis of MCI. Herein, we discuss findings derived from clinical pathologic studies of autopsy cases who died with a clinical diagnosis of MCI. The heterogeneity of clinical MCI imparts significant challenges to any review of this subject. The pathologic substrate of MCI is equally complex and must take into account not only conventional plaque and tangle pathology but also a wide range of cellular, biochemical and molecular deficits, many of which relate to cognitive decline as well as compensatory responses to the progressive disease process. The multifaceted nature of the neuronal disconnection syndrome associated with MCI suggests that there is no single event which precipitates this prodromal stage of AD. In fact, it can be argued that neuronal degeneration initiated at different levels of the central nervous system drives cognitive decline as a final common pathway at this stage of the dementing disease process.
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页码:13 / 30
页数:17
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