| Literature DB >> 20673341 |
Per Selnes1, Kaj Blennow, Henrik Zetterberg, Ramune Grambaite, Lars Rosengren, Lisbeth Johnsen, Vidar Stenset, Tormod Fladby.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease (AD) and cerebrovascular disease (CVD) including chronic small vessel disease of the brain (SVD) are the most frequent causes of dementia. AD is associated with metabolism of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and low levels of amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) X-42 in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). CVD and SVD are established risk factors for AD, brain white matter lesions (WML) are established surrogate markers for SVD and are also associated with reduced CSF AbetaX-42.A cohort survey was performed to examine whether SVD or acute CVD affects APP metabolism and to explore a potential association between WML and APP metabolism in two groups; cognitively impaired patients, subjective and mild (SCI and MCI) and stroke patients. Through measurements of CSF APP metabolite levels in patients with a wide range of WML volumes, this study aimed to determine how SVD influences APP metabolism.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20673341 PMCID: PMC2921347 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8454-7-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebrospinal Fluid Res ISSN: 1743-8454
Patient characteristics
| Variable | Stroke | SCI/MCI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Men (total) | 20 (26) | 20 (37) |
| Age | Median | 66.0 | 60.4 |
| Range | 42-78 | 43-77 | |
| MMSE | Median | 29.0 | 28.0 |
| Range | 23-30 | 23-30 | |
SCI: subjective cognitive impairment, MCI: mild cognitive impairment, MMSE: mini-mental state examination
Figure 1Visualization of chronic white matter lesions obtained by MRI. The hyper-intense areas in the FLAIR images (in red) are overlain onto the T1 images and shown in three dimensions. The ventricular walls (arrows), adjacent periventricular and subcortical hyper-intensities are visualized.
CSF concentrations of APP metabolites in two patient groups
| Variable | Stroke | SCI/MCI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CSF sAPP-α ng/mL | 499.5 (168.9) | 698.0 (248.4) | <0.001 |
| CSF sAPP-β ng/mL | 258.0 (74.2) | 329.0 (101.4) | <0.005 |
| CSF Aβ X-38 pg/L | 1048.0 (576.9) | 1141.0 (810.1) | n.s. |
| CSF Aβ X-40 pg/L | 5989.0 (1777.6) | 6323.0 (2209.3) | n.s. |
| CSF AβX-42 pg/L | 485.5 (167.5) | 483.0 (227.7) | n.s. |
| Chronic WML cubic mm | 5051.8 (11569.0) | 971.0 (6105.8) | n.s. |
Group differences after age and sex have been corrected for by linear regression. CSF sAPP-α and sAPP-β are significantly lower in the stroke group as compared to the SCI/MCI group. n.s.: not significant.
Figure 2Graph showing the correlation between the CSF levels of sAPP-α and sAPP-β in both groups of subjects.
Figure 3Plot of CSF sAPP-α against chronic white matter lesion (WML) volume. There were lower levels of APP metabolites in some patients with increased volumes of chronic WML.
Chronic and acute white matter lesion volumes as predictors for APP metabolites in all patients.
| Dependent Variables | Independent variables | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| cWML | aWML | Age | |
| CSF sAPP-α | ≤0.005 | n.s. | n.s. |
| (-0.396) | |||
| CSF sAPP-β | ≤0.01 | n.s. | n.s. |
| (-0.369) | |||
| CSF AβX-38 | ≤0.01 | n.s. | ≤0.01 |
| (-0.359) | (0.371) | ||
| CSF AβX-40 | ≤0.05 | n.s. | ≤0.05 |
| (-0.357) | (0.309) | ||
| CSF AβX-42 | ≤0.05 | n.s. | n.s. |
| (-0.273) | |||
Chronic WML significantly predicts CSF levels of APP metabolites.
cWML = chronic WML, aWML = acute WML.