Immunological Associations in Familial and Non-Familial Alzheimer
Patients and Their Families
M.F. Frecker, W.E.M. Pryse-Phillips and H.R. Strong

Abstract:
A number of autoimmune diseases and immune-related conditions
were investigated in a series of 100 Alzheimer patients and
their families. The group was divided into those who had familial
dementia of the Alzheimer type and non-familial dementia of
the Alzheimer type. HLA DR3 was associated with the familial
dementia of the Alzheimer type patients. Adult exposure to tuberculosis
appeared to be a risk factor for familial dementia of the Alzheimer
type patients. Autoimmune diseases clustered among the non-familial
dementia of the Alzheimer type patients, and also among their
relatives. Asthma and infertility were also significantly increased
among non-familial dementia of the Alzheimer type relatives.
The analysis showed that (1) autoimmunity may be important in
the sporadic form of Alzheimer disease; (2) it may be possible
to confer a decreased risk for Alzheimer disease among relatives
when many autoimmune diseases occur in the family; (3) it may
be important to assess environmental risk factors for Alzheimer
disease separately in patients with familial and sporadic disease;
and (4) the efficacy of drug therapies may be dependent on whether
the patients have a familial or sporadic form of Alzheimer disease.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 112-119
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