Association of Cardiovascular Factors and Alzhemer's Disease Plasma Amyloid-Beta Protein in subjective memory Complainers
Authors
Kristyn Bates, Edith Cowan University
Hamid Sohrabi
Mark Rodrigues, Edith Cowan University
John Beilby
Satvinda Dhaliwal
Kevin Taddei, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Arthur Criddle
Megan Wraith
Matthew Howard, Edith Cowan University
Georgia Martins, Edith Cowan University
Athena Paton
Pankaj Mehta
Jonathan Foster, Edith Cowan University
Ian Martins, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Nicola Launtenschlager
Frank Mastaglia
Simon Laws, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Sam Gandy
Ralph Martins, Edith Cowan University
Document Type
Journal Article
Publisher
IOS Press
Faculty
Faculty of Computing, Health and Science
School
School of Exercise, Biomedical and Health Science / Centre of Excellence in Alzheimer’s Disease Research
RAS ID
8879
Abstract
A strong link is indicated between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and risk for developing Alzheimer's disease (AD), which may be exacerbated by the major AD genetic risk factor apolipoprotein Eε4 (APOEε4). Since subjective memory complaint (SMC) may potentially be an early indicator for cognitive decline, we examined CVD risk factors in a cohort of SMC. As amyloid-ε (Aβ) is considered to play a central role in AD, we hypothesized that the CVD risk profile (increased LDL, reduced HDL, and increased body fat) would be associated with plasma Aβ levels. We explored this in 198 individuals with and without SMC (average age = 63 years). Correlations between Aβ_{40} and HDL were observed, which were stronger in non-APOEε4 carriers (rho = −0.315, p < 0.001) and in SMC (rho = −0.322, p = 0.01). There was no relationship between percentage body fat and Aβ_{40} in this cohort. Age and HDL remained predictive for plasma Aβ_{40} using multivariate regression analysis. We report a novel negative association between HDL and Aβ, which if demonstrated to be causal has implications for the development of lifestyle interventions and/or novel therapeutics. The relationship between HDL and Aβ and the potential significance of such an association needs to be validated in a larger longitudinal study.
DOI
10.3233/JAD-2009-1050
Comments
Bates, K. A., Sohrabi, H., Rodrigues, M. A., Beilby, J., Dhaliwal, S., Taddei, K., Criddle, A., Wraith, M., Howard, M. T., Martins, G. S., Paton, A., Mehta, P., Foster, J. K., Martins, I. J., Launtenschlager, N., Mastaglia, F., Laws, S., Gandy, S., & Martins, R. N. (2009). Association of Cardiovascular Factors and Alzhemer's Disease Plasma Amyloid-Beta Protein in subjective memory Complainers. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 17(2), 305-318. Available here