Abstract

Dementia is a worldwide health problem which affects millions of patients; Alzheimer's disease (AD) and subcortical vascular dementia (sVAD) are the two most frequent forms of its presentation. As no definite therapeutic options have been discovered, different risk factors for cognitive impairment have been searched for potential therapies. This report focuses on the possible evidence that vitamin D deficiency and hyper-homocysteinemia can be considered as two important factors for the development or the progression of neurodegenerative or vascular pathologies. To this end, we assessed: the difference in vascular risk factors and vitamin D-OH25 levels among groups of sVAD, AD, and healthy age-matched controls; the association of folate, B12, homocysteine, and vitamin D with sVAD/AD and whether a deficiency of vitamin D and an increment in homocysteine levels may be related to neurodegenerative or vessel damages. The commonly-considered vascular risk factors were collected in 543 patients and compared with those obtained from a healthy old volunteer population. ANOVA group comparison showed that vitamin D deficiency was present in demented cases, as well as low levels of folate and high levels of homocysteine, more pronounced in sVAD cases. The statistical models we employed, with regression models built, and adjustments for biochemical, demographic and neuropsychiatric scores, confirmed the association between the three measures (folate decrease, hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin D decrease) and dementia, more pronounced in sVAD than in AD.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a major clinical condition, which increases in prevalence and incidence, more rapidly with advancing age

  • CI: 2.1–9.1), which implies that for an increase of folate levels the odds of having Alzheimer’s disease (AD) decreased by 9%; the regression coefficient (B) for homocysteine was + 0.57 for AD, indicating that the decrease of homocysteine decreased the likelihood of dementia in AD group, with an exponential B value of 0.85, which implies that for a decrease of homocysteine levels the odds of having AD decreased by 15%

  • The regression coefficient (B) for vitamin D-OH25 was −0.39 for subcortical vascular dementia (sVAD), indicating that the increase of vitamin D-OH 25 decreased the likelihood of dementia in AD group, with an exponential B value of 0.79, which implies that for an increase of vitamin D-OH 25 levels the odds of having sVAD decreased by 21%; the regression coefficient (B) for folate was −0.77 for sVAD, indicating that the increase of folate decreased the likelihood of dementia in sVAD group, with an exponential B value of 0.89, which implies that for an increase of folate levels the odds of having sVAD decreased by 11%; the regression coefficient (B) for homocysteine was +0.23 for sVAD, indicating that the decrease of homocysteine

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is a major clinical condition, which increases in prevalence and incidence, more rapidly with advancing age. The operative definition of AD is established, it is more difficult to define the criteria for subcortical vascular dementia, which is a clinical entity related to small vessel muscle cells disease with consequent hypo-perfusion, diffuse ischemic white matter lesions, and incomplete. Vitamin D and Homocysteine as Risk Factors for Dementia ischemic damage (Rockwood, 2003; Korczyn et al, 2012; Jellinger, 2013). These are more frequently localized in the white matter, basal ganglia, thalamus and pons, with surrounding astrocytes and oligodendrocytes (Chui, 2001; Moretti et al, 2005). Clinical characteristic features of sVAD are progressive signs of a dysexecutive syndrome, reduced planning, and cognitive flexibility, decreased processing speed, and behavior alterations, such as depression and apathy (Meyer et al, 2000; Moretti et al, 2011; Roh and Lee, 2014; Shi and Wardlaw, 2016)

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