What can the retinal vasculature tell us about the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease?
Chief Investigator
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Institution
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Dates
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Funding Stream
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Amount
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| Mr Humayun Kiser |
University of Bristol
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01/04/2026 to 30/11/2026
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Bristol and Weston Hospitals Charity Autumn 2025
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£8,300 |
Summary
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common dementia, accounting
for two-thirds of cases worldwide. It is a progressive disease,
leading to memory loss, disability and death. Current treatments
for AD can slow its progress but do not cure the disease.
In AD, abnormal proteins accumulate in the brain, damaging brain
cells and eventually causing them to die. These harmful changes can
occur up to 20 years before memory problems and other clinical
symptoms become noticeable. To date, most AD research has focused
on how these abnormal proteins affect brain function. We have
exciting new evidence from our research that changes to the brain's
blood supply could be one of the earliest steps in the development
of AD, before brain cells start to die.
Brain scans aren't sensitive enough to pick up changes to small
blood vessels in the brain. Instead, we can look at and analyse the
small vessels at the back of the eye, which share the same blood
supply as the brain. Therefore, by examining the eye, we can find
out how changes to the blood supply of the brain lead to the
development of AD.
In this proposal, we plan to look for novel genetic,
environmental and disease risk factors associated with changes to
the small blood vessels of eye among participants in a large
population study, UK Biobank. Next, we will work out which of these
risk factors could explain the changes to the blood supply of the
eye and brain that lead to AD.