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MYELOID CELLS IN VASCULAR DEMENTIA AND ALZHEIMER´S DISEASE: POSSIBLE THERAPEUTIC TARGETS?

Alicia García-CulebrasMaría Isabel CuarteroCarolina Peña-MartínezAna MoragaSandra Vázquez-ReyesFrancisco Javier de Castro-MillánMarta Cortes-CanteliIgnacio LizasoainMaría Angeles Moro
Published in: British journal of pharmacology (2023)
Growing evidence supports that the peripheral immune system plays a role in different pathologies associated with cognitive impairment, such as vascular dementia (VD) or Alzheimer's disease (AD). The aim of this review is to summarize, within the peripheral immune system, the implication of different types of myeloid cells in AD and VD, with a special focus on post-stroke cognitive impairment and dementia (PSCID). We will review the contributions of the myeloid lineage, from peripheral cells (neutrophils, platelets, monocytes and monocyte-derived macrophages) to central nervous system (CNS)-associated ones (perivascular macrophages and microglia). Finally, we will evaluate different potential strategies for pharmacological modulation of pathological processes mediated by myeloid cell subsets, with an emphasis on neutrophils, their interaction with platelets and the process of immunothrombosis that triggers neutrophil-dependent capillary stall and hypoperfusion as possible effector mechanisms, and that may pave the way to novel therapeutic avenues to stop dementia, the epidemic of our time.
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