Relationship of Perivascular Space Markers With Incident Dementia in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease

被引:12
|
作者
Hong, Hui [1 ,2 ]
Tozer, Daniel J. [1 ]
Markus, Hugh S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Clin Neurosci, Cambridge, England
[2] Zhejiang Univ, Affiliated Hosp 2, Sch Med, Dept Radiol, Hangzhou, Peoples R China
关键词
cerebral small vessel disease; cognitive dysfunction; dementia; white matter; PREDICTS DEMENTIA; MRI MARKERS; DYSFUNCTION; DECLINE;
D O I
10.1161/STROKEAHA.123.045857
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND: Recent studies, using diffusion tensor image analysis along the perivascular space (DTI-ALPS), suggest impaired perivascular space (PVS) function in cerebral small vessel disease, but they were cross-sectional, making inferences on causality difficult. We determined associations between impaired PVS, measured using DTI-ALPS and PVS volume, and cognition and incident dementia. METHODS: In patients with lacunar stroke and confluent white matter hyperintensities, without dementia at baseline, recruited prospectively in a single center, magnetic resonance imaging was performed annually for 3 years, and cognitive assessments, including global, memory, executive function, and processing speed, were performed annually for 5 years. We determined associations between DTI-ALPS and PVS volume with cerebral small vessel disease imaging markers (white matter hyperintensity volume, lacunes, and microbleeds) at baseline and with changes in imaging markers. We determined whether DTI-ALPS and PVS volume at baseline and change over 3 years predicted incident dementia. Analyses were controlled for conventional diffusion tensor image metrics using 2 markers (median mean diffusivity [MD] and peak width of skeletonized MD) and adjusted for age, sex, and vascular risk factors. RESULTS: A total of 120 patients, mean age 70.0 years and 65.0% male, were included. DTI-ALPS declined over 3 years, while no change in PVS volume was found. Neither DTI-ALPS nor PVS volume was associated with cerebral small vessel disease imaging marker progression. Baseline DTI-ALPS was associated with changes in global cognition (beta=0.142, P=0.032), executive function (beta=0.287, P=0.027), and long-term memory (beta=0.228, P=0.027). Higher DTI-ALPS at baseline predicted a lower risk of dementia (hazard ratio, 0.328 [0.183-0.588]; P<0.001), and this remained significant after including median MD as a covariate (hazard ratio, 0.290 [0.139-0.602]; P<0.001). Change in DTI-ALPS predicted dementia conversion (hazard ratio, 0.630 [0.428-0.964]; P=0.048), but when peak width of skeletonized MD and median MD were entered as covariates, the association was not significant. There was no association between baseline PVS volume, or PVS change over 3 years, and conversion to dementia. CONCLUSIONS: DTI-ALPS predicts future dementia risk in patients with lacunar strokes and confluent white matter hyperintensities. However, the weakening of the association between change in DTI-ALPS and incident dementia after controlling for peak width of skeletonized MD and median MD suggests part of the signal may represent conventional diffusion tensor image metrics. PVS volume is not a predictor of future dementia risk.
引用
收藏
页码:1032 / 1040
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Cerebral small vessel disease: neuroimaging markers and clinical implication
    Xiaodong Chen
    Jihui Wang
    Yilong Shan
    Wei Cai
    Sanxin Liu
    Mengyan Hu
    Siyuan Liao
    Xuehong Huang
    Bingjun Zhang
    Yuge Wang
    Zhengqi Lu
    Journal of Neurology, 2019, 266 : 2347 - 2362
  • [32] Basal Ganglia Enlarged Perivascular Spaces are Linked to Cognitive Function in Patients with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease
    Huijts, Marjolein
    Duits, Annelien
    Staals, Julie
    Kroon, Abraham A.
    de Leeuw, Peter W.
    van Oostenbrugge, Robert J.
    CURRENT NEUROVASCULAR RESEARCH, 2014, 11 (02) : 136 - 141
  • [33] Peripheral apolipoprotein is an independent factor for enlarged perivascular space in small vessel disease
    Zhang, Wenhua
    Wang, Ruiming
    Shi, Fangying
    CLINICAL NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY, 2024, 238
  • [34] Hemodynamic significance of intracranial atherosclerotic disease and ipsilateral imaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease
    Zheng, Lina
    Tian, Xuan
    Abrigo, Jill
    Fang, Hui
    Ip, Bonaventure Y. M.
    Liu, Yuying
    Li, Shuang
    Liu, Yu
    Lan, Linfang
    Liu, Haipeng
    Ip, Hing Lung
    Fan, Florence S. Y.
    Ma, Sze Ho
    Ma, Karen
    Lau, Alexander Y.
    Soo, Yannie O. Y.
    Leung, Howan
    Mok, Vincent C. T.
    Wong, Lawrence K. S.
    Xu, Yuming
    Liu, Liping
    Leng, Xinyi
    Leung, Thomas W.
    EUROPEAN STROKE JOURNAL, 2024, 9 (01) : 144 - 153
  • [35] Imaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease are associated with Alzheimer's disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
    Wu, Qi
    Zhang, Jupeng
    Lei, Peng
    Zhu, Xiqi
    Huang, Changhui
    FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE, 2025, 17
  • [36] Frailty and dementia risks in asymptomatic cerebral small vessel disease: A longitudinal cohort study
    Chung, Chih-Ping
    Lee, Wei-Ju
    Chou, Kun-Hsien
    Lee, Pei-Lin
    Peng, Li-Ning
    Wang, Pei-Ning
    Lin, Ching-Po
    Chen, Liang-Kung
    ARCHIVES OF GERONTOLOGY AND GERIATRICS, 2022, 102
  • [37] Impact of enlarged perivascular spaces in the basal ganglia on gait in cerebral small vessel disease
    Shiyi Yang
    Jiwei Jiang
    Linlin Wang
    Min Zhao
    Wenyi Li
    Yunyun Duan
    Qiwei Ren
    Tianlin Jiang
    Shirui Jiang
    Huiying Zhang
    Yilong Wang
    Weiqi Chen
    Jun Xu
    Aging Clinical and Experimental Research, 37 (1)
  • [38] Methods of a Study to Assess the Contribution of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dementia Risk Alleles to Racial Disparities in Vascular Cognitive Impairment and Dementia
    Sawyer, Russell P.
    Worrall, Bradford B.
    Howard, Virginia J.
    Crowe, Michael G.
    Howard, George
    Hyacinth, Hyacinth I.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, 2023, 12 (17):
  • [39] Association between carotid artery perivascular fat density and cerebral small vessel disease
    Zhang, Dan-Hong
    Jin, Jiao-Lei
    Zhu, Cheng-Fei
    Chen, Qiu-Yue
    He, Xin-Wei
    AGING-US, 2021, 13 (14): : 18839 - 18851
  • [40] Cerebral small vessel disease and risk of incident stroke, dementia and depression, and all-cause mortality: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Rensma, Sytze P.
    van Sloten, Thomas T.
    Launer, Lenore J.
    Stehouwer, Coen D. A.
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 2018, 90 : 164 - 173