Associations of Sensory and Motor Functions With Neuropathological Changes in Aging
Jeannette Mahoney, Jennifer Deal, Natascha Merten

TL;DR
This paper explores how sensory and motor changes in aging are linked to Alzheimer's disease pathology, aiming to identify early non-cognitive biomarkers.
Contribution
The study presents findings from four research projects linking sensory and motor impairments to Alzheimer's biomarkers.
Findings
Sensory integration issues precede cognitive decline in Alzheimer's.
Olfactory loss is an early warning sign of Alzheimer's onset.
Sensory and motor impairments correlate with AD biomarkers.
Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most-common cause of dementia, affecting nearly 6.7 million older adults in America. The number of people with AD is projected to increase two-fold by 2050, potentially reaching 13.8 million. While AD is characterized by cognitive impairments as well as mobility disorders, it also alters sensory processing as it associated with accumulation of proteins (plaques) and tangles, which disrupt communication between brain cells. Such disruption in neural signaling leads to sensory integration issues that often precede cognitive decline. In fact, growing evidence suggests that Alzheimer’s pathology manifests in sensory association areas well before appearing in neural regions involved in higher‐order cognitive areas like the prefrontal cortex. As well, impairments in olfaction (loss of smell) are considered an early warning sign of Alzheimer’s onset. While…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies · Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies · Human auditory perception and evaluation
