What is it about?
This article explains why the current amyloid hypothesis is failing to produce effective treatments for Alzheimer's Disease. It says that beta-amyloid is not the main cause of damage to the brain, it is the entry of lipids from outside of the brain. This is only possible because the blood brain barrier (which normally keeps external lipids out) becomes damaged. This can happen as a result of ageing, brain trauma, high blood pressure, smoking and a number of other reasons, all of which have been identified as risk factors for AD. Beta-amyloid also damages the BBB, but is only the main cause of such damage in comparatively rare early-onset, inherited forms of the disease. Overall, ageing is the primary driver, explaining why it is almost exclusively the elderly get this disease. The BBB separates two very different lipid systems - one in the brain, one in the rest of the body. Damage to the BBB exposes the brain to the external system and AD is the result.
Featured Image
Photo by Natasha Connell on Unsplash
Why is it important?
It provides a totally different way of understanding Alzheimer's Disease. As a result, it provides entirely new ways of testing, preventing and treating the disease.
Perspectives
As the sole author, I don't have any unique perspective to add to what has already been written!
Jonathan Rudge
University of Reading
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: A New Hypothesis for Alzheimer’s Disease: The Lipid Invasion Model, Journal of Alzheimer s Disease Reports, March 2022, IOS Press,
DOI: 10.3233/adr-210299.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







