Nutrition and Metabolic Profiles in the Natural History of Dementia: Recent Insights from Systems Biology and Life Course Epidemiology
Idioma
EN
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Current Nutrition Reports. 2019-09, vol. 8, n° 3, p. 256-269
Resumen en inglés
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Worldwide, approximately 50 million people have dementia (mostly Alzheimer's disease). Dementia results from a multicomponent pathophysiology that follows complex dynamics over many years before symptoms ...Leer más >
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Worldwide, approximately 50 million people have dementia (mostly Alzheimer's disease). Dementia results from a multicomponent pathophysiology that follows complex dynamics over many years before symptoms become apparent. Nutrition may represent a target of choice for the primary prevention of dementia; however, there is still no firm answer on how to prevent dementia efficiently. We provide a broad overview of recent studies leveraging system biology and life-long epidemiology to address the multidimensionality and dynamical patterns underlying dementia and improve knowledge on the link between nutrition, cardiometabolic health and dementia risk. RECENT FINDINGS: The aging of reference population-based cohort studies, the increasing availability of cutting-edge biomarkers (e.g., brain imaging, metabolomics) and the refinement of statistical tools to model complex exposures and dynamical health outcomes have yielded substantial progress in the understanding of dementia. Systems biology coupled with life-course epidemiology will pave the way toward novel precision nutrition approaches for prevention and management of dementia.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Biostatistics
LEHA
Centros de investigación