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The relationship between anxiety and levels of Alzheimer's disease plasma biomarkers.

Mark Anthony BernardAllal BoutajangoutLudovic DebureWajiha AhmedAnthony Q BriggsCarolina Boza-CalvoAlok VedvyasKaryn MarshOmonigho M BubuRicardo S OsorioThomas M WisniewskiArjun V Masurkar
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2024)
Anxiety is highly prevalent in Alzheimer's disease (AD), correlating with CSF/PET biomarkers and disease progression. Relationships to plasma biomarkers are unclear. Herein, we compare levels of plasma biomarkers in research participants with and without anxiety at cognitively normal, mild cognitive impairment, and AD dementia stages. We observed significantly higher plasma tau/Aβ42 ratio in AD participants with anxiety versus those without, but did not observe differences at other stages or plasma biomarkers. No such relationships were evident with depression. These results support a unique pathophysiological relationship between anxiety and AD that can be reflected in plasma biomarkers, suggestive of heightened neurodegeneration.
Keyphrases
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • cognitive decline
  • sleep quality
  • computed tomography
  • depressive symptoms
  • positron emission tomography