Review: Vascular dementia: clinicopathologic and genetic considerations

被引:79
作者
Vinters, H. V. [1 ,2 ]
Zarow, C. [3 ]
Borys, E. [4 ,5 ]
Whitman, J. D. [1 ,2 ,6 ,7 ]
Tung, S. [1 ,2 ]
Ellis, W. G. [4 ]
Zheng, L. [3 ]
Chui, H. C. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Dept Pathol & Lab Med Neuropathol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
[2] Univ Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
[3] Univ South Calif, Keck Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Los Angeles, CA 90033 USA
[4] Univ Calif Davis, Sch Med, Dept Pathol, Sacramento, CA 95817 USA
[5] Loyola Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Pathol, Maywood, IL 60153 USA
[6] UC San Francisco, Med Ctr, Dept Pathol, San Francisco, CA USA
[7] UC San Francisco, Med Ctr, Dept Lab Med, San Francisco, CA USA
关键词
CADASIL; CARASIL; cerebral; cerebroretinal vasculopathies; ischaemic vascular dementia; microinfarcts; stroke; CEREBRAL AMYLOID ANGIOPATHY; SMALL-VESSEL DISEASE; AUTOSOMAL-DOMINANT ARTERIOPATHY; HEALTH-CARE PROFESSIONALS; SMOOTH-MUSCLE-CELLS; ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; HIPPOCAMPAL SCLEROSIS; CORTICAL MICROINFARCTS; SUBCORTICAL INFARCTS;
D O I
10.1111/nan.12472
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The incidence and severity of cerebrovascular disease (CVD) increase with advancing age, as does the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD). Not surprisingly, heterogeneous forms of CVD may coexist with AD changes in the ageing brain'. These include angiopathies (affecting both large and small arteries) that result from classical' risk factors (hypertension, smoking and diabetes) and others (cerebral amyloid angiopathy) that are biochemically closely linked to AD. The morphologic consequences of these various vascular diseases are infarcts and/or haemorrhages of varying sizes within the brain, which lead to neurocognitive decline that may mimic AD - though the vascular abnormalities are usually detectable by neuroimaging. More subtle effects of CVD may include neuroinflammation and biochemical lesions' that have no reliable morphologic correlate and thus escape the attention of even an experienced Neuropathologist. The pathogenesis of hippocampal injury resembling ischaemic change - commonly seen in the brains of geriatric subjects - remains controversial. In recent years, genetically determined forms of microangiopathy (e.g. CADASIL, CARASIL, Trex1-related microangiopathies, CARASAL, familial forms of cerebral amyloid angiopathy or CAA) have provided interesting cellular and molecular clues to the pathogenesis of sporadic microvascular disease such as arteriolosclerosis and AD-related CAA.
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 266
页数:20
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