The two "hallmark" Alzheimer lesions observable at autopsy – first described by German neuropsychiatrist Alois Alzheimer in 1906 — are amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Plaques are extra cellular deposits of abnormally processed amyloid precursor protein, and tangles are intracellular accumulations of the cytoskeletal protein tau.
Researchers now recognize that development of plaques and tangles may represent a fairly late stage in the disease process that may or may not reflect the fundamental biochemical disruptions at work in Alzheimer's.
Although the "amyloid hypothesis," which assigns a central causative role to abnormal amyloid processing, remains the most widely embraced theory, other active areas of research include tau, inflammation, disruptions of cell signaling pathways, and cardiovascular risk factors.
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