Abstract
Presently, non-genetic Alzheimer's disease (AD) is wrongly classified as a neurodegenerative disorder. When vascular lesions are present, AD is considered to be a vascular dementia. However, compelling evidence indicates that (AD) is a vascular disorder with neurodegenerative consequences. There is an urgent clinical need to ascertain the true cause of this dementia.
In this review, evidence indicating that AD is a vascular disorder comes from a number of different disciplines including studies in epidemiology, pharmacology, neuroimaging, clinical medicine, pathology, physiology and experimental research. This collective evidence also addresses many previously puzzling questions regarding: i) past and present treatment failures in AD, ii) strange association of AD risk factors with many vascular-related disorders, iii) parallel lesions, clinical symptoms risk factors and potentially interchangeable treatments present in AD and vascular dementia, iv) historical difficulty in finding neurodegenerative markers to detect AD pre-clinivally, and, v) paradoxical pathophysiologic events preceding AD neurodegenerative changes.
Re-classifying AD as a vascular disorder would very likely improve the chances of finding a useful treatment for this disorder because clinical study designs could focus on more realistic and relevant pathologic targets than is presently practiced.
A short summary of potential new research lines that may provide novel therapy in the treatment and management of AD is discussed.
