New Research Sheds Light on Vascular dementia and Potential Microplastic Link
Vascular dementia is caused by blood flow issues in the brain; it’s one of the most common types of dementia, but not as well researched or understood as others.
Neuropathologist Elaine Bearer from the University of New Mexico is trying to change that.
In a recent review, she has suggested new categorizations for vascular dementia, each with unique pathologies – the actual biological changes in tissues and organs.
She highlights meaningful overlap with Alzheimer’s disease, and she says her team’s novel microscopy method sheds light on how microplastics that have seeped into the body could be triggering or exacerbating cases of vascular dementia.
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“We have been flying blind,” says Bearer. “The various vascular pathologies have not been comprehensively defined, so we haven’t known what we’re treating.”
“And we didn’t know that nano- and microplastics were in the picture, as we couldn’t see them.”
By analyzing both her own microscope work (which is published in a preprint) and studies by other researchers, Bearer has categorized the results of chemical staining on the cerebral blood vessels of people who died with dementia.
Through that analysis, several different disease processes were identified, all potentially contributing to vascular dementia. these included the thickening of arteries and small amounts of bleeding, as well as tiny strokes that can harm neurons.
The classifications are intended to be used in future studies of dementia, to explore how blood vessel damage