Abstract
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia in people over 60 years old. The molecular and cellular alterations that trigger this disease are still diffuse, one of the reasons for the delay in finding an effective treatment. In the search for new targets to search for novel therapeutic avenues, clinical studies in patients who used anti-inflammatory drugs indicating a lower incidence of AD have been of value to support the neuroinflammatory hypothesis of the neurodegenerative processes and the role of innate immunity in this disease. Neuroinflammation appears to occur as a consequence of a series of damage signals, including trauma, infection, oxidative agents, redox iron, oligomers of τ and β-amyloid, etc. In this context, our theory of Neuroimmunomodulation focus on the link between neuronal damage and brain inflammatory process, mediated by the progressive activation of astrocytes and microglial cells with the consequent overproduction of proinflammatory agents. Here, we discuss about the role of microglial and astrocytic cells, the principal agents in neuroinflammation process, in the development of neurodegenerative diseases such as AD. In this context, we also evaluated the potential relevance of natural anti-inflammatory components, which include curcumin and the novel Andean Compound, as agents for AD prevention and as a coadjuvant for AD treatments.
Highlights
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and usually affects people over 65
AD patients who used NSAIDs compared with another group of patients who did not use NSAIDs, showed a significantly slower progression of disease (Rich et al, 1995). These findings suggest that the protection provided by the chronic use of NSAIDs in patients with AD may partly be derived from the attenuation of microglial activation
The development of AD involves a series of perturbations and imbalances that systemically affect the normal functioning of the central nervous system (CNS), triggering a condition of dementia
Summary
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia and usually affects people over 65. Cellular and molecular immune components such as cytokines, complement and pattern-recognition are contributing players, and they can lead to the activation of the glial cells, i.e., microglia and astrocytes.
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