Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Promise of metformin for preventing age-related cognitive dysfunction

Ashok K. Shetty, LeelavathiN Madhu, Maheedhar Kodali

Neural Regeneration Research · 2021 · ▲ 30 citations

Abstract

The expanded lifespan of people, while a positive advance, has also amplified the prevalence of age-related disorders, which include mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and Alzheimer's disease. Therefore, competent therapies that could improve the healthspan(definition) of people have great significance. Some of the dietary and pharmacological approaches that augment the lifespan could also preserve improved cognitive function in old age. Metformin, a drug widely used for treating diabetes, is one such candidate that could alleviate age-related cognitive dysfunction. However, the possible use of metformin to alleviate age-related cognitive dysfunction has met with conflicting results in human and animal studies. While most clinical studies have suggested the promise of metformin to maintain better cognitive function and reduce the risk for developing dementia and Alzheimer's disease in aged diabetic people, its efficacy in the nondiabetic population is still unclear. Moreover, a previous animal model study implied that metformin could adversely affect cognitive function in the aged. However, a recent animal study using multiple behavioral tests has reported that metformin treatment in late middle age improved cognitive function in old age. The study also revealed that cognition-enhancing effects of metformin in aged animals were associated with the activation of the energy regulator adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, diminished neuroinflammation, inhibition of the mammalian target of mTOR(definition)-inhibiting drug studied for extending healthspan and lifespan." style="text-decoration:underline dotted; text-underline-offset:2px; cursor:help;">rapamycin(definition) signaling, and augmented autophagy(definition) in the hippocampus. The proficiency of metformin to facilitate these favorable modifications in the aged hippocampus likely underlies its positive effect on cognitive function. Nonetheless, additional studies probing the outcomes of different doses and durations of metformin treatment at specific windows in the middle and old age across sex in nondiabetic and non-obese prototypes are required to substantiate the promise of metformin to maintain better cognitive function in old age.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.4103/1673-5374.320971
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-13 MST

Cite this

APA
Shetty, A.K., Madhu, L., &amp; Kodali, M. (2021). Promise of metformin for preventing age-related cognitive dysfunction. <em>Neural Regeneration Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.320971
Vancouver
Shetty AK, Madhu L, Kodali M. Promise of metformin for preventing age-related cognitive dysfunction. Neural Regeneration Research. 2021. doi:10.4103/1673-5374.320971.
BibTeX
@article{ashok2021Promis, title = {Promise of metformin for preventing age-related cognitive dysfunction}, author = {Ashok K. Shetty and LeelavathiN Madhu and Maheedhar Kodali}, journal = {Neural Regeneration Research}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.4103/1673-5374.320971}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings