Author:
Nassir Che Mohd Nasril Che Mohd,Ghazali Mazira Mohamad,Hashim Sabarisah,Idris Nur Suhaila,Yuen Lee Si,Hui Wong Jia,Norman Haziq Hazman,Gau Chuang Huei,Jayabalan Nanthini,Na Yuri,Feng Linqing,Ong Lin Kooi,Abdul Hamid Hafizah,Ahamed Haja Nazeer,Mustapha Muzaimi
Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) represents a spectrum of pathological processes of various etiologies affecting the brain microcirculation that can trigger neuroinflammation and the subsequent neurodegenerative cascade. Prevalent with aging, CSVD is a recognized risk factor for stroke, vascular dementia, Alzheimer disease, and Parkinson disease. Despite being the most common neurodegenerative condition with cerebrocardiovascular axis, understanding about it remains poor. Interestingly, modifiable risk factors such as unhealthy diet including high intake of processed food, high-fat foods, and animal by-products are known to influence the non-neural peripheral events, such as in the gastrointestinal tract and cardiovascular stress through cellular inflammation and oxidation. One key outcome from such events, among others, includes the cellular activations that lead to elevated levels of endogenous cellular-derived circulating microparticles (MPs). MPs can be produced from various cellular origins including leukocytes, platelets, endothelial cells, microbiota, and microglia. MPs could act as microthrombogenic procoagulant that served as a plausible culprit for the vulnerable end-artery microcirculation in the brain as the end-organ leading to CSVD manifestations. However, little attention has been paid on the potential role of MPs in the onset and progression of CSVD spectrum. Corroboratively, the formation of MPs is known to be influenced by diet-induced cellular stress. Thus, this review aims to appraise the body of evidence on the dietary-related impacts on circulating MPs from non-neural peripheral origins that could serve as a plausible microthrombosis in CSVD manifestation as a precursor of neurodegeneration. Here, we elaborate on the pathomechanical features of MPs in health and disease states; relevance of dietary patterns on MP release; preclinical studies pertaining to diet-based MPs contribution to disease; MP level as putative surrogates for early disease biomarkers; and lastly, the potential of MPs manipulation with diet-based approach as a novel preventive measure for CSVD in an aging society worldwide.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Reference369 articles.
1. White matter lesions: from present to future. In: Westland TB, Calton RN, editors;Rouhl,2009
2. Risk and determinants of dementia in patients with mild cognitive impairment and brain subcortical vascular changes: a study of clinical neuroimaging, and biological markers-the VMCI-tuscany study: rationale, design, and methodology;Poggesi;Int J Alzheimers Dis.,2012
3. Clinical presentations and epidemiology of vascular dementia;Smith;Clin Sci.,2017
4. Blood pressure sodium: associationwith MRI markers in cerebral small vessel disease;Heye;J Cereb Blood Flow Metab,2015
5. Mechanisms of sporadic cerebral small vessel disease: insights from neuroimaging;Wardlaw;Lancet Neurol,2013
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献