| Literature DB >> 23110387 |
Niousha Bolandzadeh1, Jennifer C Davis, Roger Tam, Todd C Handy, Teresa Liu-Ambrose.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maintaining cognitive function is essential for healthy aging and to function autonomously within society. White matter lesions (WMLs) are associated with reduced cognitive function in older adults. However, whether their anatomical location moderates these associations is not well-established. This review systematically evaluates peer-reviewed evidence on the role of anatomical location in the association between WMLs and cognitive function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23110387 PMCID: PMC3522005 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-12-126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1(A): Searching strategy retrieved from Ovid, (B): Flowchart of study selection.
Quality assessment results for included studies
| Groot et al. et al. [ | + | + | - | + |
| Shenkin et al. [ | + | + | - | - |
| Baune et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| Kim et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| Silbert et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| McClleland et al. [ | + | + | - | + |
| Wright et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| Kaplan et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| Wakefield et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| O’Brien et al. [ | + | + | - | + |
| Smith et al. [ | - | + | - | + |
| Burns et al. [ | + | + | - | + |
| Ishii et al. [ | + | + | - | + |
| Tullberg et al. [ | - | + | - | - |
Characteristics of studies included in this systematic review
| Groot et al. [ | 1077 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2000 | Subsample of Rotterdam and Zeotemeer Studies | |
| Shenkin et al. [ | 105 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2005 | Random Sample of Community-Dwelling Participants | |
| Baune et al. [ | 268 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2009 | Subsample of MEMO Study | |
| Kim et al. [ | 84 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2011 | Random Sample of Normals/Recruited from Memory Clinic | |
| Silbert et al. [ | 104 | Longitudinal |
| 2008 | Subsample of Oregon Brain Aging Study | |
| McClleland et al. [ | 3647 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2000 | Subsample of CHS Cohort | |
| Wright et al. [ | 656 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2008 | Subsample of NOMAS Cohort study | |
| Kaplan et al. [ | 95 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2009 | Random Sample of Participants | |
| Wakefield et al. [ | 99 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2010 | Sample Selected for a Longitudinal Study | |
| O’Brien et al. [ | 149 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2002 | Subsample of SCOPE Study | |
| Smith et al. [ | 145 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2011 | Subsample of Prospective Study | |
| Burns et al. [ | 156 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2005 | 88 Normal (CDR=0), 68 Early-Stage AD (CDR=0.5,1) | |
| Ishii et al. [ | 453 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2007 | 340 (CDR=0), 113 (CDR=0.5) | |
| Tullberg et al. [ | 78 | Cross-Sectional |
| 2004 | 22 Normal (CDR=0), 30 CIND (CDR=0.5), 26 Demented (CDR≥1) |
Abbreviations: MEMO = Memory and Morbidity in Augsburg Elderly; CDR = Clinical Dementia Rating Scale; CHS = Cardiovascular Health Study; NOMAS = Northern Manhattan Study; SCOPE = Study on Cognition and Prognosis in Elderly; CIND = Cognitively Impaired not Demented.
Outcome Measures: white matter lesion quantification
| Groot et al. [ | PD, T1, T2 | S: Four lobes of Frontal, Parietal, Occipital, and Temporal | 1.5 T |
| P, S, Regions | Scoring | P: Adjacent frontal horns, lateral ventricles wall, and occipital horns | |
| Shenkin et al. [ | T2, FLAIR | - | 1.5 T |
| S, P | Scoring | ||
| Baune et al. [ | PD, T1, T2 | - | 1.5 T |
| S, P | Scoring | ||
| Kim et al. [ | T2, FLAIR | - | 1.5 T |
| S, P | Volum | ||
| Silbert et al. [ | PD, T2 | - | 1.5 T |
| S, P | Volume | ||
| McClleland et al. [ | PD, T1, T2 | Cerebral White Matter, Cerebellar White Matter, Basal Ganglia | 1.5 T |
| Regions | Scoring | ||
| Wright et al. [ | PD, T2, FLAIR | Frontal, Deep, and Occipital-Temporal-Parietal | 1.5 T |
| S, I, Regions | Volume | ||
| Kaplan et al. [ | T2, FLAIR | Frontal and Posterior Regions | 3.0 T |
| Regions | Volume | ||
| Wakefield et al. [ | T1, FLAIR | Anterior, Superior, Posterior Corona Radiata | 3.0 T |
| Regions | Volume | Cingulate Gyrus, Genu, Body, Splenium of Corpus Callusum | |
| Anterior and Posterior Limb of Internal Capsule | |||
| Superior Longitudinal Fasciculus | |||
| O’Brien et al. [ | T2, FLAIR | Internal and External Capsule | 1.5 T |
| Regions | Scoring | ||
| Smith et al. [ | PD, T1, T2 | Whole Brain | 1.5 T |
| Regions | Volume | ||
| Burns et al. [ | T1, T2 | S: Frontal, Parietal, Temporal, and Occipital Lobes | 1.5 T |
| S, P, Regions | Scoring | P: Right and Left Frontal Horns, Posterior Horns, and Ventricular Bodies | |
| Ishii et al. [ | T2 | S: Left and Right | 1.5 T |
| P, S, Regions | Scoring | P: Anterior and Posterior | |
| Tullberg et al. [ | T1, T2 | Orbitofrontal, Prefrontal, Dorsolateral Frontal, Parietal, and Occipitotemporal | 1.5 T |
| Regions | Volume |
Abbreviations: PD = Proton Density; FLAIR = Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery.
Outcome measures: Cognitive tests used for two cognitive domains of memory and executive function/processing speed
| Groot et al. et al. [ | Stroop, Letter-Digit Substitution Task, Verbal Fluency | Rey’s Auditory, Memory Scanning Task |
| Shenkin et al. [ | Verbal Fluency, Controlled Word Association, Moray House Test, Raven’s Progressive Matrices | Wechsler Memory Scale |
| Baune et al. [ | Stroop, Letter-Digit Substitution Task | 3-Word Recall |
| Kim et al. [ | Boston Naming, Buccofacial Praxis Test, Semantic Controlled Oral Word Association Test, Stroop Color, Word Test | Seoul Verbal Learning Test, Ray Complex Figure Test, Delayed Recall and Recognition, Digit Span Tests |
| Silbert et al. [ | - | Delayed Story Recall |
| McClleland et al. [ | Digit-Symbol Substitution Task | - |
| Wright et al. [ | Color Trail 1 & 2 | - |
| Kaplan et al. [ | Stroop, Trail Making, CalCap | Repeated Battery for Neuropsychological Status |
| Wakefield et al. [ | Stroop, Trail Making 1 & 2, CalCap | - |
| O’Brien et al. [ | Verbal Fluency, Trail Making 1 & 2 | Memory Component of CDR |
| Smith et al. [ | Letter Fluency, Trail Making 2 | Episodic Memory, Alpha Span Test |
| Burns et al. [ | Trail Making 1 & 2, Short Blessing Test, Boston Naming | Wechsler Memory Scale, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale |
| Ishii et al. [ | Verbal Fluency, Trail Making Test, Benton’s Visual Form Test | ADAS-Cog, 10 Word Recall, Digit Span Forward |
| Tullberg et al. [ | Verbal Fluency | Wechsler Memory Scale, Word List Learning, Digit Span Backward |
Abbreviations: CalCap = California Computerized Assessment Package; CDR = Clinical Dementia Rating Scale; ADAS-Cog = Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive.
Association between the structural location of white matter lesion (i.e., subcortical, periventricular, or regional) with two domains of cognitive function (i.e., memory and executive function/processing speed)
| Groot et al. et al. [ | Controlled for subcortical, periventricular WMLs were associated with memory and executive function/processing speed. |
| Shenkin et al. [ | Subcortical and periventricular WMLs were not associated with any of the cognitive measurements. |
| Baune et al. [ | Subcortical WMLs were associated with memory. |
| As a subgroup of subcortical WMLs, infarction lesions were associated with executive function/processing speed. | |
| Periventricular WMLs were not associated with any of the cognitive functions. | |
| Kim et al. [ | Only periventricular WML was significantly correlated with memory and executive function/processing speed, when both the periventricular and subcortical WMLs were entered simultaneously into the regression model. |
| Silbert et al. [ | Change in subcortical WMLs (excluding infarction lesions) was associated with memory decline. This association was not true for periventricular WMLs. |
| McClleland et al. [ | White matter lesions were associated with executive function/processing speed, in all white matter regions of cerebrum, cerebellum, and basal ganglia. |
| Wright et al. [ | Subcortical WMLs (including infarction lesions) were associated with executive function/processing speed, in regions of frontal and deep white matter. |
| Kaplan et al. [ | White matter lesions were associated with memory and executive function/processing speed, in frontal regions. |
| Wakefield et al. [ | White matter lesions were associated with executive function/processing speed in white matter regions of posterior corona radiata and splenium of corpus callosum. |
| O’Brien et al. [ | White matter lesions were associated with speed of memory retrieval and executive function/processing speed. |
| Smith et al. [ | White matter lesions were associated with memory and executive function/processing speed. White matter lesions in the following locations were significantly associated with memory: right inferior temporal-occipital, left temporal-occipital periventricular, and right parietal periventricular white matter; and anterior limb of internal capsule. Also, WMLs in the following regions were significantly associated with executive function: the bilateral inferior frontal, temporal-occipital periventricular, right parietal periventricular, and prefrontal white matter; and the anterior limb of the internal capsule bilaterally. |
| Burns et al. [ | For non-demented participants, only associate memory was associated with periventricular WMLs. For participants with early-stage Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), memory and executive function/processing speed were associated with both periventricular and subcortical WMLs. |
| Ishii et al. [ | For CDR=0 group, anterior periventricular WML and a test of executive function/processing speed were significantly correlated. |
| Tullberg et al. [ | In non-demented individuals, increased volumes of frontal (specifically prefrontal and dorsolateral), parietal, and occipital WML were separately associated with lower executive function/processing speed scores. |
| Frontal WMLs were also associated with reduced memory function in non-demented group. No association was found for individuals with dementia. |
Abbreviations: WML = White Matter Lesion; CDR = Clinical Dementia Rating Scale.
The most commonly-used neuropsychological tests in the included studies
| Executive Function | Trail-Making Test, Stroop Test, Verbal Fluency Test |
| Memory | Wechseler Memory Scale, Word Recall Test |