Alzheimer's Disease Flashcards

1
Q

what is the main risk factor of AD?

A

age

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2
Q

what genetic contribution is there to AD?

A

APEN, APP, ApoE

8% contribution to risk in early onset

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3
Q

what are the symptoms of AD?

A
o Memory loss – short-term.
o Disorientation/confusion.
o Language problems 
– stops mid-conversation.
o Personality changes
 – becoming confused, fearful, anxious.
o Poor judgement 
– e.g. with money.
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4
Q

what are the 3 main hypotheses for explaining the pathophysiology for AD?

A

1) amyloid hypothesis
2) Tau hypothesis
3) inflammation hypothesis

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5
Q

what occurs normally with amyloid?

A
  1. Amyloid precursor protein (APP) cleaved by alpha-secretase.
  2. sAPP-alpha is released and the C83 fragment remains.
  3. C83 is then digested by gamma-secretase.
  4. Products are then removed.
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6
Q

what are the main enzymes involved in normally physiological removal of amyloid precursor protein?

A

alpha and gamma secretase

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7
Q

what is the pathophysiological process that occurs according to the amyloid hypothesis?

A
  1. APP is cleaved by beta-secretase instead of alpha-secretase
  2. sAPP-beta released instead of sAPP-alpha leaving the C99 fragment
  3. C99 is digested by gamma-secretase releasing beta-amyloid protein.
  4. beta-amyloid forms toxic aggregates in and around neurones

normally:
APP —> alpha secretase–> sAPPalpha released, C83 remains–> C83 digested by gamma secretase–> products removed

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8
Q

what are the enzymes involved in pathophysiology in amyloid H0?

A

BETA-secretase and gamma- secretase

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9
Q

what is Tau protein? what is its function normally?

A

Tau protein is a soluble protein present in axons.

Tau is important for assembly and stability of microtubules.

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10
Q

how is Tau protein involved in the pathophysiology of AD according to the tau hypothesis?

A
  1. Hyperphosphorylated tau is insoluble and therefore self-aggregates.
  2. The self-aggregates form neurofibrillary tangles.
    These are neurotoxic.
  3. The tangles result ultimately in microtubule instability and neurotoxic damage to neurones.
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11
Q

what are the cells involved in the inflammatory hypothesis?

A

microglial cells (immune cells of the CNS like macrophages)

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12
Q

what are microglial cells?

A

specialised CNS immune cells (like macrophages)

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13
Q

how do microglial cells get involved in the pathophysiology of AD according to the inflammatory hypothesis?

A
  1. Increased release of inflammatory mediators & cytotoxic proteins.
  2. Increased phagocytosis.
  3. Decreased levels of neuroprotective proteins.
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14
Q

what system can be targeted in the treatment of AD? therefore which drugs are used?

A

NMDAs and cholinergic system

therefore use NDMA receptor blocker and anticholinesterases

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15
Q

what are the anticholinesterases used in AD treatment?

why use anticholinesterases?

A

o Donepezil
o Galantamine
o Rivastigmine

enhanced ACh effect means communication between neurones is increased

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16
Q

what is donepezil?

A

Reversible cholinesterase inhibitor.

Long plasma T1/2 therefore one dose daily

17
Q

what is rivastigmine?

A

Pseudo-reversible anti-cholinesterase (AChE)
& butyl-cholinesterase (BChE) inhibitor (not good–> accounts for the side effects)

T1/2 = 8 hours.
- Side effects can be counteracted by administration as a transdermal patch.

18
Q

what is galantamine?

A

Reversible cholinesterase inhibitor.
alpha 7 nAChR agonist also

T1/2 = 7-8 hours.

19
Q

why is galantamine also an agonist of nAChR?

A

AChR differ in different systems i.e. outside CNS due to different expression of receptor subunits therefore the drug can have an agonist effect on a different structured receptor

20
Q

what NMDA (glutamate) receptor blocker is used in the treatment of AD?

A

Memantine

used in moderate to severe AD

21
Q

what is memantine?

A

Use-dependant non-competitive NMDA receptor blocker with low channel affinity.

Long plasma T1/2.

22
Q

what is the effect of using anticholinesterases and NMDA receptor blockers?

A

there is a build up ACh (more available) which reduces the symptoms of AD

23
Q

what is the significance of using donezepil?

A

it has immediate effects on AD symptoms but does not treat the underlying disease

effects do not last long

24
Q

why is memantine use-dependent? how does this affect the disease level is can be used for?

A

memantine is most effective when there is high NMDA receptor activity which only occur in more severe neurodegeneration, hence its use in moderate to severe AD

25
Q

what are the failed/non-drugs in the attempted treatment of AD?

A
1. gamma-secretase inhibitors 
– failed clinical trials.
2. beta-amyloid humanised antibodies 
3.Tau inhibitors
 – in clinical trials.
26
Q

examples of gamma-secretase inhibitors

A

e. g. Tarenflurbil – binds to APP molecule.

e. g Semagacestat – SMI of the gamma-secretase molecule.

27
Q

what is the problem with using gamma-secretase inhibitors?

A

gamma-secretase is used in the normal physiologically removal of amyloid precursor protein

Semagacestat made people worse (Notch receptor–> skin cancer)

28
Q

examples of beta amyloid antibody drugs

A

1) Passive drugs:
- Bapineuzumab – antibody against beta amyloid protein.
- Solanezumab – antibody against beta amyloid protein.

2) Active drugs – in development:
- Vaccines

29
Q

example of tau inhibitor

A
Methylene blue (in phase 3) 
– currently treats methaemoglinanaemia