Publications by authors named "Lila Shapiro"

Article Synopsis
  • - Inflammation plays a critical role in age-related diseases, particularly neurological conditions like Alzheimer's Disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, significantly impacting healthcare as the population ages.
  • - The research highlights that targeting inflammation may mitigate Abeta proteotoxicity, with drugs like Humira demonstrating the commercial potential of anti-inflammatory treatments.
  • - High-throughput screenings identified compounds such as phenylbutyrate, methicillin, and quetiapine as effective at reducing Abeta proteotoxicity, suggesting that existing drug classes may offer promising avenues for treating age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
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Discovery of interventions that delay or minimize age-related diseases is arguably the major goal of aging research. Conversely discovery of interventions based on phenotypic screens have often led to further elucidation of pathophysiological mechanisms. Although most hypotheses to explain lifespan focus on cell-autonomous processes, increasing evidence suggests that in multicellular organisms, neurons, particularly nutrient-sensing neurons, play a determinative role in lifespan and age-related diseases.

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Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is an important risk factor for dementia. The possibility to mitigate this risk by controlling T2DM is compelling; however, different glucose-lowering drugs have different effects on the brain by virtue of their different mechanisms of action. The clinical and epidemiological data appear mixed, warranting careful critical evaluation of the human studies.

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Objective: Abnormal blood lipid levels are common in individuals with bipolar disorder (BD). Previous studies have revealed lipid-mood associations in adults with BD, but no data on this relationship is available in youth populations. This cross-sectional study examined the associations of lipid levels with mood states and symptoms in a cohort of youth with BD.

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