Insulin Resistance and Metabolic Comorbidities in Alzheimer’s Disease
Insulin Resistance and Metabolic Comorbidities in Alzheimer’s Disease
Abstract Alzheimer’s disease affects 50 million people worldwide and just like any modern lifestyle disease, it is steadily increasing. Unfortunately, a cure has not yet been found, despite decades of research. The pathophysiology of Alzheimer’s disease is extraordinarily complex and involves many different factors. Despite it being a protein misfolding disease, a lot of evidence currently point to insulin resistance, impaired glucose metabolism and comorbidities with other metabolic disorders such as obesity, elevated blood lipids, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, as a potential root cause. Genetics aside, it seems like poor metabolic functioning affects the brain and central nervous system a great deal: affecting mood, behaviour, and cognitive performance. Even mood disorders are interlinked with metabolic disorders and increase the risk for Alzheimer’s disease later in life. This is a summary of objectively chosen original research articles, published between 2011-2021 and with insulin resistance as the main objective for cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease.
Johansson Martina
Department of Health, Medicine & Caring Sciences, Link?ping University
神经病学、精神病学基础医学医学研究方法
Johansson Martina.Insulin Resistance and Metabolic Comorbidities in Alzheimer’s Disease[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-08].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.04.23.21255980.点此复制
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