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Ethanol exposure and high-fat diet may impair amyloid-beta clearance and promote oxidative stress in Alzheimer's disease

Ethanol exposure and high-fat diet may impair amyloid-beta clearance and promote oxidative stress…
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Key Takeaway
Note that combined ethanol and high-fat diet exposure may impair clearance and promote stress in Alzheimer's disease.

This narrative review explores the potential role of ethanol exposure and high-fat diet in the context of Alzheimer's disease. The scope includes various pathological markers such as amyloid-beta plaques, hyperphosphorylated Tau, neurofibrillary tangle formation, and synaptic dysfunction. The authors also discuss neuroinflammatory tone, oxidative stress, insulin resistance, and metabolic dysregulation as relevant areas of investigation.

Key findings indicate that ethanol exposure and high-fat diet may increase amyloid-beta42/40 ratios and promote oxidative stress. Additionally, Tau-associated kinases may be activated, and insulin resistance may be induced. Microglial lipid handling is noted as altered, and A-beta clearance is impaired. The review suggests that cognitive impairment, neuroinflammation, and synaptic dysfunction may result from co-occurring or additive effects of these exposures.

The authors acknowledge that evidence directly examining combined ethanol and high-fat diet exposure remains limited. Consequently, the review does not establish definitive causal links but rather highlights areas requiring further research. The practice relevance is not explicitly detailed, and safety data regarding adverse events or tolerability were not reported in the source material.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedJun 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a chronic, progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques and hyperphosphorylated Tau, leading to neurofibrillary tangle formation and synaptic dysfunction. Increasing evidence indicates that these hallmark pathologies are shaped by sustained alterations in neuroimmune and metabolic homeostasis. Lifestyle-associated exposures, including ethanol consumption and high-fat diet (HFD) intake, are emerging as modulators of neuroinflammatory tone and may influence susceptibility to AD-like pathology across the lifespan. Preclinical studies show that ethanol exposure increases Aβ42/40 ratios, promotes oxidative stress, and activates Tau-associated kinases, whereas HFD induces insulin resistance, alters microglial lipid handling, and impairs Aβ clearance. These effects converge on overlapping pathways involving microglial activation, metabolic dysregulation, and kinase–phosphatase imbalance. Evidence directly examining combined ethanol and HFD exposure remains limited; however, available studies suggest co-occurring or additive effects on cognitive impairment, neuroinflammation, and synaptic dysfunction. This review synthesizes current evidence to delineate shared neuroimmune and metabolic mechanisms linking ethanol and HFD exposure to AD-related pathology. We highlight points of mechanistic overlap, including oxidative stress, inflammatory signaling, and disrupted proteostasis, while distinguishing between directly measured effects and inferred pathways. Finally, we identify key gaps in understanding how dual exposures interact and outline priorities for future studies aimed at clarifying their contribution to AD risk and progression.
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