Animal Research for Alzheimer Disease: Failures of Science and Ethics

J. Pippin, Sarah E. Cavanaugh, F. Pistollato
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Perhaps the most impactful and foreboding development in chronic diseas­ es in recent decades has been the increasing prevalence and awareness of dementia. The various dementias, especially Alzheimer disease (AD), have de­ railed and ended the lives of tens of millions in America and worldwide. It is a truism that AD patients die twice. First the mind dies, and only later does the body. AD uniquely and unremittingly affects not only patients, but their families, caregivers, and communities. In recent years, AD may have displaced cancer as the most feared disease among Americans. As with other diseases that have no meaningful methods for prevention and treatment, research tar­ geting AD has primarily focused on preclinical approaches, predominantly us­ ing animals. Nonetheless, decades of animal research have failed to translate into significant advances in the prevention or treatment of AD. In view of this failure, a different and human-relevant approach is critically needed.
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阿尔茨海默病的动物研究:科学和伦理的失败
近几十年来,慢性疾病中最具影响力和最具预兆的发展可能是痴呆症的患病率和意识的提高。各种各样的痴呆症,尤其是阿尔茨海默病(AD),已经在美国和全世界夺走了数千万人的生命。众所周知,阿尔茨海默病患者会死两次。首先是精神死亡,然后是肉体死亡。阿尔茨海默病不仅对患者,而且对他们的家人、照顾者和社区都有独特而持续的影响。近年来,阿尔茨海默病可能已经取代癌症,成为美国人最害怕的疾病。与其他没有有效预防和治疗方法的疾病一样,针对AD的研究主要集中在临床前方法,主要是在动物身上。尽管如此,数十年的动物研究未能在预防或治疗阿尔茨海默病方面取得重大进展。鉴于这一失败,迫切需要一种不同的和与人有关的方法。
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