Researchers
have linked a specific type of body fat to the abnormal proteins in the brain
that are hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease up to 20 years before the earliest
symptoms of dementia appear, according to a study being presented today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). The
researchers emphasized that lifestyle modifications targeted at reducing this
fat could influence the development of Alzheimer’s disease.
“This crucial result was discovered
because we investigated Alzheimer’s disease pathology as early as midlife—in
the 40s and 50s—when the disease pathology is at its earliest stages, and
potential modifications like weight loss and reducing visceral fat are more
effective as a means of preventing or delaying the onset of the disease,” said
lead study author Mahsa Dolatshahi, M.D., M.P.H., post-doctoral research
associate at Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology (MIR) at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.
An estimated 6.9 million Americans, aged
65 and older, are living with Alzheimer’s disease, according to the Alzheimer’s
Association. The association estimates this number could grow to 13 million by
2050, barring the development of medical breakthroughs to prevent or cure the
disease.
For the study, the researchers focused
on the link between modifiable lifestyle-related factors, such as obesity, body
fat distribution and metabolic aspects, and Alzheimer’s disease pathology.
A total of 80 cognitively normal midlife
individuals (average age: 49.4 years, female: 62.5%,) were included in the
study. Approximately 57.5% of participants were obese, and the average body
mass index (BMI) of the participants was 32.31. The participants underwent
brain positron emission tomography (PET), body MRI and metabolic assessment
(glucose and insulin measurements), as well as a lipid (cholesterol) panel. MRI
scans of the abdomen were performed to measure the volume of the subcutaneous
fat (the fat under skin) and visceral fat (deep hidden fat surrounding the
organs).
“We investigated the association of BMI,
visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, liver fat fraction, thigh fat and muscle, as
well as insulin resistance and HDL (good cholesterol), with amyloid and tau
deposition in Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Dolatshahi, a member of the Raji
Lab at MIR’s Neuroimaging Labs Research Center.
Thigh muscle scans were used to measure
volume of muscle and fat. Alzheimer’s disease pathology was measured using PET
scans with tracers that bind to amyloid plaques and tau tangles that accumulate
in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease.
The findings revealed that higher levels
of visceral fat were related to increased amyloid, accounting for 77% of the
effect of high BMI on amyloid accumulation. Other types of fat did not explain
obesity-related increased Alzheimer’s pathology.
“Our study showed that higher visceral
fat was associated with higher PET levels of the two hallmark pathologic
proteins of Alzheimer’s disease—amyloid and tau,” Dr. Dolatshahi said. “To our
knowledge, our study is the only one to demonstrate these findings at midlife
where our participants are decades out from developing the earliest symptoms of
the dementia that results from Alzheimer’s disease.”
The study also showed that higher
insulin resistance and lower HDL were associated with high amyloid in the
brain. The effects of visceral fat on amyloid pathology were partially reduced
in people with higher HDL.
“A key implication of our work is that
managing Alzheimer’s risk in obesity will need to involve targeting the related
metabolic and lipid issues that often arise with higher body fat,” said senior
study author Cyrus A. Raji, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of radiology at
MIR.
Although previous studies have shown the
role of high BMI in damaging the cells of the brain, no similar study has
investigated the differential role of visceral and subcutaneous fat or
metabolic profile, especially in terms of Alzheimer’s amyloid pathology as
early as midlife, Dr. Dolatshahi pointed out.
“This study goes beyond using BMI to
characterize body fat more accurately with MRI and, in so doing, reveals key
insights about why obesity can increase risk for Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr.
Dolatshahi said.
Drs. Raji, Dolatshahi and colleagues are
also presenting a study at RSNA 2024 that shows how obesity and visceral fat
reduce blood flow in the brain.
In that study, the researchers performed
brain and abdominal MRI on cognitively normal midlife individuals with a wide
range of BMI and compared whole-brain and regional cerebral blood flow on brain
MRI in individuals with high vs. low visceral and subcutaneous fat. The high
visceral fat group showed lower whole-brain blood flow. No significant
difference was observed in cerebral blood flow in the groups with high vs. low
subcutaneous fat.
“This work will have a considerable
impact on public health because nearly three out of four Americans are
overweight or obese,” Dr. Raji said. “Knowing that visceral obesity negatively
affects the brain opens up the possibility that treatment with lifestyle
modifications or appropriate weight-loss drugs could improve cerebral blood
flow and potentially lower the burden of and reduce the risk for Alzheimer’s
disease.”
Source: https://press.rsna.org/timssnet/media/pressreleases/14_pr_target.cfm?ID=2541
Source: Hidden fat predicts Alzheimer’s 20 years ahead of symptoms – Scents of Science

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