Neuropathology Studies of Dementia in US Persons other than Non-Hispanic Whites.

Q3 Medicine
Free neuropathology Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-03-10 DOI:10.17879/freeneuropathology-2022-3795
My-le Nguyen, Emily Z Huie, Rachel A Whitmer, Kristen M George, Brittany N Dugger
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia are two of the most prevalent dementias that afflict the aging population in the United States (US). Studies have made great strides in understanding the neuropathology of these diseases; however, many studies are conducted in the context of non-Hispanic whites (NHWs), and few include the rapidly growing underrepresented populations that reside in the US. We sought to characterize current knowledge of the neuropathologic landscape of AD and vascular dementia of the largest growing US minority groups, namely Latinos/Hispanics, Black Americans, and Asian Americans, compared with NHWs being the majority group. It is vital to note these historic categories are social constructs and cultural and social associations may underlie differences.  We conducted a literature search utilizing specific criteria to yield neuropathology papers that addressed the demographics and neuropathologies of relevance, then collated the findings into this review. We reveal that while there has been much progress in neuropathological research involving Latinos/Hispanics and Black Americans in the past decade, no cohesive conclusions could be extrapolated from the existing data due to the dearth of minority participants and even smaller amount of information related to the heterogeneity within each minority group, especially Latinos/Hispanics. Furthermore, we reveal an even greater scarcity in neuropathological studies involving Asian Americans, also a very heterogeneous group. We hope the presented findings will illuminate the paucity of minority representation in not just neuropathological research but the field of clinical research overall and serve to inspire clinicians and researchers to help reduce the health disparities underrepresented groups in the US face.

Abstract Image

非西班牙裔白人以外的美国人痴呆的神经病理学研究。
阿尔茨海默病(AD)和血管性痴呆是困扰美国老年人口的两种最普遍的痴呆症。研究在理解这些疾病的神经病理学方面取得了巨大的进步;然而,许多研究都是在非西班牙裔白人(nhw)的背景下进行的,很少包括居住在美国的快速增长的未被充分代表的人口。我们试图描述目前对美国最大的少数群体(即拉丁裔/西班牙裔美国人、黑人美国人和亚裔美国人)的AD和血管性痴呆的神经病理学景观的了解,与nhw作为多数群体进行比较。重要的是要注意,这些历史类别是社会结构,文化和社会联系可能是差异的基础。 我们利用特定的标准进行了文献检索,以产生与人口统计学和神经病理学相关的神经病理学论文,然后将研究结果整理到本综述中。我们发现,虽然在过去十年中,涉及拉丁裔/西班牙裔和黑人美国人的神经病理学研究取得了很大进展,但由于少数族裔参与者的缺乏,以及与每个少数族裔(尤其是拉丁裔/西班牙裔)异质性相关的信息更少,因此无法从现有数据中推断出具有凝聚力的结论。此外,我们还发现,涉及亚裔美国人的神经病理学研究更少,这也是一个非常异质的群体。我们希望所提出的研究结果能够阐明,不仅在神经病理学研究中,而且在整个临床研究领域,少数民族代表性的不足,并有助于激励临床医生和研究人员帮助减少美国代表性不足的群体面临的健康差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
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0.00%
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审稿时长
3 weeks
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