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Nutrients, Cognitive Function, and Brain Aging: What We Have Learned from Dogs

Yuanlong Pan

2021Medical Sciences21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Due to a difference in genetics, environmental factors, and nutrition, just like in people, dogs age at different rates. Brain aging in people and dogs share similar morphological changes including irreversible cortical atrophy, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and ventricular enlargement. Due to severe and irreversible brain atrophy, some aging dogs develop cognitive dysfunction syndrome (CDS), which is equivalent to dementia or Alzheimer's disease (AD) in people. The risk factors and causes of CDS in dogs have not been fully investigated, but age, gender, oxidative stress, and deficiency of sex hormones appears to be associated with increased risk of accelerated brain aging and CDS in dogs. Both AD and CDS are incurable diseases at this moment, therefore more efforts should be focused on preventing or reducing brain atrophy and minimizing the risk of AD in people and CDS in dogs. Since brain atrophy leads to irreversible cognitive decline and dementia, an optimal nutritional solution should be able to not only enhance cognitive function during aging but also reduce irreversible brain atrophy. Up to now, only one nutritional intervention has demonstrated both cognition-enhancing benefits and atrophy-reducing benefits.

Topics & Concepts

AtrophyMedicineDementiaCerebral amyloid angiopathyCognitionBrain agingCognitive declineDiseaseCognitive reserveCerebral atrophyBrain sizeNeurosciencePhysiologyInternal medicineCardiologyPsychiatryMagnetic resonance imagingPsychologyRadiologyDiet and metabolism studiesGut microbiota and healthHuman-Animal Interaction Studies
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