Early-onset Alzheimer's disease in Scotland: environmental and familial factors

LJ Whalley - The British Journal of Psychiatry, 2001 - cambridge.org
The British Journal of Psychiatry, 2001cambridge.org
BackgroundAlzheimer's disease (AD) is a common, complex, age-related disorder in which
both genetic and environmental factors are important. AimsTo integrate recent studies on
genetic and environmental factors in AD into a multi-factorial disease model.
MethodDisease models to explain gene-environment interaction in cardiovascular disease
are related to observations on AD. ResultsInformative, community-based studies on the
genetic epidemiology of AD are rare. Putative risk factors from the Scottish studies include …
BackgroundAlzheimer's disease (AD) is a common, complex, age-related disorder in which both genetic and environmental factors are important.AimsTo integrate recent studies on genetic and environmental factors in AD into a multi-factorial disease model.MethodDisease models to explain gene-environment interaction in cardiovascular disease are related to observations on AD.ResultsInformative, community-based studies on the genetic epidemiology of AD are rare. Putative risk factors from the Scottish studies include increased paternal age in AD men and coal mining as paternal occupation in both AD and vascular dementia. Migration effects suggest that environmental factors in high-incidence AD areas are important during adult life.ConclusionsThe studies summarised do not provide sufficient data to support a single comprehensive disease model of gene-environment interaction in AD. Future studies will require very large (≥600) sample sizes, molecular genetic analysis, and environmental data that span neurodevelopment and the period between disease onset and appearance of clinical symptoms.
Cambridge University Press