Recent years have seen significant advances in diagnostic testing of central nervous system (CNS) function and disease. However, there remain challenges in developing a comprehensive suite of non- or minimally invasive assays of neural health and disease progression. Due to the direct connection with the CNS, structural changes in the neural retina, retinal vasculature and morphological changes in retinal immune cells can occur in parallel with disease conditions in the brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimer's disease (AD) is prevalent around the world, yet our understanding of the disease is still very limited. Recent work suggests that the cornerstone of AD may include the inflammation that accompanies it. Failure of a normal pro-inflammatory immune response to resolve may lead to persistent central inflammation that contributes to unsuccessful clearance of amyloid-beta plaques as they form, neuronal death, and ultimately cognitive decline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging is associated with a priming of microglia such that they are hypersensitive to further immune challenges. As such high-fat diet during aging can have detrimental effects on cognition that is not seen in the young. However, conflicting findings also suggest that obesity may protect against cognitive decline during aging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroglia have long been thought to be responsible for the initiation of the central nervous system (CNS) immune response to pathogen exposure. However, we recently reported that depleting CNS microglia and circulating monocytes does not abrogate the sickness response in male rats or mice to bacterial endotoxin, lipopolysaccharide (LPS). How the central immune response to an endotoxin challenge is initiated and resolved in the absence of microglia and monocytes remains unclear.
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