- Hainsworth, Atticus H;
- Allan, Stuart M;
- Boltze, Johannes;
- Cunningham, Catriona;
- Farris, Chad;
- Head, Elizabeth;
- Ihara, Masafumi;
- Isaacs, Jeremy D;
- Kalaria, Raj N;
- Lesnik Oberstein, Saskia AMJ;
- Moss, Mark B;
- Nitzsche, Björn;
- Rosenberg, Gary A;
- Rutten, Julie W;
- Salkovic-Petrisic, Melita;
- Troen, Aron M
Background
Disease models are useful for prospective studies of pathology, identification of molecular and cellular mechanisms, pre-clinical testing of interventions, and validation of clinical biomarkers. Here, we review animal models relevant to vascular cognitive impairment (VCI). A synopsis of each model was initially presented by expert practitioners. Synopses were refined by the authors, and subsequently by the scientific committee of a recent conference (International Conference on Vascular Dementia 2015). Only peer-reviewed sources were cited.Methods
We included models that mimic VCI-related brain lesions (white matter hypoperfusion injury, focal ischaemia, cerebral amyloid angiopathy) or reproduce VCI risk factors (old age, hypertension, hyperhomocysteinemia, high-salt/high-fat diet) or reproduce genetic causes of VCI (CADASIL-causing Notch3 mutations).Conclusions
We concluded that (1) translational models may reflect a VCI-relevant pathological process, while not fully replicating a human disease spectrum; (2) rodent models of VCI are limited by paucity of white matter; and (3) further translational models, and improved cognitive testing instruments, are required.