Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and Diabetes Mellitus (DM) are the
two most common and devastating health problems in the elderly. They share a
number of common features among which are important impact on quality of life and
substantial health care costs. Epidemiological
and biological evidence support a pathophysiological link between Type 2
Diabetes Mellitus (DMT2) and cognitive impairment. A causative association
between DM and Alzheimer’s disease has been suggested on the basis of clinical,
epidemiological, genetic and experimental studies. Persons with DM have a
higher incidence of cognitive decline and an increased risk of developing AD
and other types of dementia, and comorbidity increases the risk. Insulin
resistance predicts medial temporal hypermetabolism in Mild Cognitive Impairment
(MCI) conversion to AD and glucose uptake changes in AD in medial temporal
regions predicting worse memory performance. DM has been shown to influence the
rate of functional decline among patients with mild AD dementia than in those
without comorbid DM. However, the precise mechanisms involved in the
development of AD in diabetics are not yet fully understood, and several
pathogenic pathways have been discussed.
Autopsy studies stated that diabetic patients show
significantly less AD pathology (senile plaques, neurofibrillary tangles,
cerebral amyloid angiopathy, etc.) but more cerebrovascular lesions including
microvascular lesions and white matter changes than subjects without DM. Vasculo-neural
dysfunction has been suggested to represent a potential etiological linkage
between DMT2 and AD, while others suggested that the association between DM
and dementia is only partially mediated through cerebrovascular disease and
that DM is associated independently with overal dementia among elderly, but not
with AD or vascular dementia.
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