Alzheimer's disease Flashcards

1
Q

Name the theories of alzheimer’s pathophysiology

A

Beta amyloid
Tau protein
Inflammation

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2
Q

Recall the normal physiological metabolism of APP

A
  1. APP cleavage –> sAPP-alpha fragment and C83 (alpha secretase)
  2. C83 –> non-toxic products to be excreted (gamma secretase)
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3
Q

Recall the theorised pathophysiological metabolism of APP

A
  1. APP cleavage –> sAPP-beta fragment and C99 (beta-secretase)
  2. C99 –> beta-amyloid protein (gamma secretase)
  3. Beta amyloid forms fibrils and then plaques which can attach to blood vessels
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4
Q

What is tau protein?

A

soluble protein present in axons, that is integrated in microtubules to promote neuron assembly and stability

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5
Q

Recall the tau protein theory of alzheimers pathophysiology

A

Hyperphosphorylation of tau makes it insoluble

Tau proteins autoaggregate to form neurotoxic neurofibrillary tangles leading to cell death and microtubule instability

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6
Q

Recall the inflammatory theory of alzheimers pathophysiology

A

Inappropriate activation of microglia increases inflammatory mediators, cytotoxic proteins and phagocytosis + decreases neuroprotective protein expression

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7
Q

Recall 5 clinical symptoms of Alzheimers disease

A
Memory loss
Language loss
Personality changes
Poor judgement
Disorientation and confusion
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8
Q

Recall three genetic associations with alzheimers disease and which of these associate to early-onset and late-onset disease

A

Mutations in:
APP (EOD)
PSEN (EOD)
ApoE (LOD)

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9
Q

Recall the 2 classes of drugs currently approved for use in Alzheimer’s

A

Anticholinesterases

NMDA receptor antagonists

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10
Q

Recall 3 examples of anti-cholinesterases

A

Donepezil
Rivastigmine
Galantamine

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11
Q

Name an example of an NMDA receptor antagonist

A

Memantine

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12
Q

Differnetiate the indications for anticholinesterase vs NMDAr antagonist use in Alzheimer’s

A

Anticholinesterase = mild-moderate disease

NMDAR antagonist = severe disease

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13
Q

Which of the anti-cholinesterase drugs is the gold standard and why?

A

Donepezil

Long half life

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14
Q

Recall the general MOA of donepezil

A

Reversible cholinesterase inhibitor

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15
Q

How does rivastigmine’s MOA differ from donepezil, and what is the consequence of this?

A
  1. Is pseudo-reversible

2. Also antagonises butyrylcholinesterases as well as AChesterases, so has additional side effects

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16
Q

Recall the MOA of galantamine, how this differs from doneprezil and the consequences of this

A
  1. Reversibly inhibits ACh esterase

2. Also agonises the alpha 7 subunit of nAChRs –> decreased symptoms of Alzheimer’s

17
Q

Describe why memantine is only indicated in severe disease

A

It is use-dependent as neurodegeneration causes increased activation of NMDA receptors

18
Q

Recall 3 classes of drug that were “treatment failures” for Alzheimer’s

A

Beta amyloid antibodies
Tau protein inhibitors
Gamma secretase inhibitors

19
Q

Recall the MOA of the gamma secretase inhibitor tarenflubil and why it is not licensed for use

A
  1. Binds APP to inhibit gamma-S
  2. NSAID to combat inflammation
    Unfortunately it is ineffective
20
Q

Recall the MOA of the gamma secretase inhibitor semagacestat and why it is not licensed for use

A

Small molecule gamma-S inhibitor

Inhibition of NOTCH pathway lead to skin cancer

21
Q

What are bapineuzumab and solanezumab examples of?

A

Beta-amyloid antibody drugs

22
Q

Recall an example of a tau-inhibiting drug

A

Methylene blue

23
Q

Why has methylene blue not been pursued as an Alzheimer’s treatment?

A

It was pretty effective but since it is already licensed for treatment of methaeglobinaemia drug companies would not make a profit from it. It also turns you blue.