Advance of sporadic Alzheimer's disease animal models.

Clicks: 288
ID: 22547
2019
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Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common form of dementia, is a progressive neurodegenerative disease. In the past decades, numbers of promising drug candidates showed significant anti-AD effects in preclinical studies but failed in clinical trials. One of the major reasons might be the limitation of appropriate animal models for evaluating anti-AD drugs. More than 95% of AD cases are sporadic AD (sAD). However, the anti-AD drug candidates were mainly tested in the familial AD (fAD) animal models. The diversity between the sAD and fAD might lead to a high failure rate during the development of anti-AD drugs. Therefore, an ideal sAD animal model is urgently needed for the development of anti-AD drugs. Here, we summarized the available sAD animal models, including their methodology, pathologic features, and potential underlying mechanisms. The limitations of these sAD animal models and future trends in the field were also discussed.
Reference Key
zhang2019advancemedicinal Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Zhang, Lili;Chen, Chen;Mak, Marvin Sh;Lu, Junfeng;Wu, Zeqing;Chen, Qiuhe;Han, Yifan;Li, Yuefeng;Pi, Rongbiao;
Journal medicinal research reviews
Year 2019
DOI
10.1002/med.21624
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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