The role of cerebral-cognitive reserve in the birth of a child with Alzheimer’s in late-life individuals
A. Sidenkova

TL;DR
This paper explores how brain and cognitive reserves help protect against Alzheimer's disease by delaying its clinical symptoms and maintaining cognitive function in older adults.
Contribution
The paper introduces the concept of a unified cerebral-cognitive reserve model that integrates structural and functional brain resilience mechanisms.
Findings
Cerebral reserve is based on brain structure integrity and influences resistance to neurodegeneration.
Cognitive reserve involves lifelong mental engagement and affects compensatory brain strategies.
Reserve mechanisms can be modulated to delay Alzheimer's onset and support healthy aging.
Abstract
The modern understanding of AD allows us to consider it through the constructs of “vulnerability” and “stability” of the brain in relation to the pathological effects of neurodegeneration. To describe the resistance of the brain to a developing lesion due to a pathological process, the concept of “reserve” is proposed. A systematic review of scientific studies was conducted. The review includes an analysis of full-text literature sources. Resilience models based on reserves are described, which can be broadly divided into cerebral and cognitive reserve models. The quality of the brain substrate underlies the cerebral reserve. Its role and power are determined by the ratio of healthy/affected neurons, the integrity of synaptic connections, and the size of the brain/ It seems to us that the conditions that promote or hinder the functioning of the brain should also be taken into account…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Health and Disease
