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Alzheimer disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with a poorly understood pathology. It is an irreversible progressive brain disease that slowly deteriorates memory, thinking and behavior. It affects the elderly population and is also hereditary. The incidence doubles with every decade after sixty with no signs of leveling off. More than 35 million people Worldwide, including 5.5 million living in the United States, suffer from AD. As the United States population ages, it is expected that the number of people with AD will increase, reaching 13.2 to 16.0 million by the year 2050. The cost of care for patients with AD in the United States is expected to rise as well, from $172 billion a year in 2010 to a trillion dollars a year by 2050.
Although the exact etiopathology is not known there are several lines of evidence that suggest that metabolic and inflammatory features are important. It also has been known for many years that the Blood Brain Barrier (BBB) of Alzheimer's patients allow more harmful particles to cross into the brain than the BBBs of those without the disease do. It's known that this barrier, which is regulating transfer of molecules between the brain and blood, and vice versa blood and brain, can become leaky and dysfunctional (in particular capillaries dysfunction) and lead to subsequent problems likely contributing to onset and progression of dementia. This protocol will explore several of the most promising putative factors that cause AD.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION criteria AD Subject Group:
Inability to find way about indoors (home or familiar location) Inability to interpret surroundings, for example, to recognize whether in hospital or home, etc.
Under Changes in Habit
INCLUSION criteria Healthy Control and Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) Subject Groups:
INCLUSION criteria T2D Subject Group:
EXCLUSION criteria for AD Subject , Healthy Control Subject and T2D Subject Groups:
EXCLUSION criteria only for AD Subject Group:
EXCLUSION criteria only for control Subject and T2D Subject Groups:
14 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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