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Systemic Infection and Tau Pathology Acceleration

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mechanism1563 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Systemic Infection and Tau Pathology Acceleration

Introduction

Acute systemic infections represent a significant but underappreciated risk factor for accelerated neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias. While the relationship between chronic infections and neurodegeneration has been extensively studied, emerging evidence demonstrates that acute infectious events—particularly pneumonia, urinary tract infections (UTIs), and sepsis—can trigger rapid progression of [tau](/proteins/tau) pathology through multiple mechanistic pathways. This mechanism page examines how peripheral infections propagate to the brain, induce neuroinflammation, and accelerate the formation and spread of neurofibrillary tangles, ultimately leading to steeper cognitive decline.

Overview: Acute Infections as Dementia Accelerators

The brain does not exist in immunological isolation. Throughout life, peripheral infections trigger inflammatory responses that communicate with the central nervous system through multiple well-characterized pathways. In the aging brain—or one already primed by AD pathology—these inflammatory events can have far more severe consequences than in the healthy young brain [@holmes2009].

Key Observations

Clinical and epidemiological research has established several critical findings:

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