Cerebral Small Vessel Disease as a Consequence of Inflammation

Cerebral small vessel disease is the name given to the manifestation and consequences of a broad grab-bag of pathologies that affect the capillaries and other small blood vessels of the brain. That includes loss of elasticity, loss of capillary density, amyloid accumulation, leakage of the blood-brain barrier, and other similar problems leading to greater damage of tissues around blood vessels and a reduced blood supply to critical areas of the brain. Researchers here mount the argument that this is largely a consequence of the chronic inflammation of aging, a hypothesis that will be assessed in the years ahead by the widespread deployment of senolytic therapies, capable of removing senescent cells and their pro-inflammatory signaling from the body and brain.

Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) is one of the most important causes of vascular dementia. Immunosenescence and inflammatory response, with the involvement of the cerebrovascular system, constitute the basis of this disease. Immunosenescence identifies a condition of deterioration of the immune organs and consequent dysregulation of the immune response caused by cellular senescence, which exposes older adults to a greater vulnerability. A low-grade chronic inflammation status also accompanies it without overt infections, an "inflammaging" condition. The correlation between immunosenescence and inflammaging is fundamental in understanding the pathogenesis of age-related CSVD (ArCSVD).

The production of inflammatory mediators caused by inflammaging promotes cellular senescence and the decrease of the adaptive immune response. Vice versa, the depletion of the adaptive immune mechanisms favours the stimulation of the innate immune system and the production of inflammatory mediators leading to inflammaging. Furthermore, endothelial dysfunction, chronic inflammation promoted by senescent innate immune cells, oxidative stress and impairment of microglia functions constitute, therefore, the framework within which small vessel disease develops: it is a concatenation of molecular events that promotes the decline of the central nervous system and cognitive functions slowly and progressively.

Because the causative molecular mechanisms have not yet been fully elucidated, the road of scientific research is stretched in this direction, seeking to discover other aberrant processes and ensure therapeutic tools able to enhance the life expectancy of people affected by ArCSVD. Although the concept of CSVD is broader, this manuscript focuses on describing the neurobiological basis and immune system alterations behind cerebral aging. Furthermore, the purpose of our work is to detect patients with CSVD at an early stage, through the evaluation of precocious MRI changes and serum markers of inflammation, to treat untimely risk factors that influence the burden and the worsening of the cerebral disease.

Link: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23137136

Comments

Off topic: If I were a millionaire I would start a non-profit to make a Genetically Modified Tree with the purpose of living longer then Methuselah Tree and open for scientists to study it for millennia. And unlike outdoors trees it should get best treatment and injection of new stem celles, etc.

Posted by: ciclo at July 18th, 2022 9:44 AM

Off topic, but I saw this news today that scientists have managed to stick drugs in lipposomes and magnetic nanoparticles onto E. coli bacteria in order to potentially use magnets to steer them towards cancer tumors and precisely deliver drugs to them.

https://phys.org/news/2022-07-bacteria-based-biohybrid-microrobots-mission-day.html

I was thinking this could have applications in steering gene therapy towards the thymus in order to regenerate it.

Posted by: jimofoz at July 18th, 2022 10:26 AM
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