High serum uric acid levels are protective against cognitive impairment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Published:2023-10-25
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
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ISSN:0340-5354
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Container-title:Journal of Neurology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Neurol
Author:
Iazzolino Barbara, Grassano Maurizio, Moglia Cristina, Canosa Antonio, Manera Umberto, Vasta Rosario, Cabras Sara, Callegaro Stefano, Matteoni Enrico, Di Pede Francesca, Palumbo Francesca, Mora Gabriele, Calvo Andrea, Chiò AdrianoORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Uric acid (UA) has emerged as a factor that can modify cognitive function both in the general population and in people with neurodegenerative disorders. Since very few data are available concerning amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), we explored the correlation of UA levels and cognitive impairment in a large cohort of ALS patients.
Methods
We enrolled ALS patients consecutively seen at the Turin ALS expert center in the 2007–2018 period who underwent both cognitive/behavioral and UA evaluation at diagnosis. Patients were classified in 5 categories: normal cognition (ALS-CN), isolated cognitive impairment (ALSci), isolated behavioural impairment (ALSbi), cognitive and behavioural impairment (ALScbi), frontotemporal dementia (ALS-FTD). For this study, ALSci, ALSbi and ALScbi were merged as ALS with intermediate cognitive impairment (ALS-INT).
Results
Out of the 841 ALS patients, 422 had ALS-CN, 271 ALS-INT and 148 ALS-FTD. The mean values of UA were significantly different among the cognitive subgroups of patients, with the lowest values in the ALS-FTD (ALS-CN, 288.5 ± 78.0 (μmol/L; ALS-INT, 289.7 ± 75.5 μmol/L; ALS-FTD, 271.8 ± 74.9 μmol/L; p = 0.046). The frequency of ALS-FTD was significantly higher in the 1st tertile of UA. Lower UA levels were independently associated with FTD (OR 1.32, 95% c.i. 1.01–1.43; p = 0.038) in binary logistic regression.
Conclusions
We found that in ALS lower UA serum levels are correlated with reduced frequency of co-morbid FTD. Patients with intermediate cognitive impairment showed UA levels similar to ALS-CN but higher than ALS-FTD, implying that higher UA levels can prevent or delay cognitive function deterioration.
Funder
Ministero della Salute Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca Seventh Framework Programme Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
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