| Literature DB >> 27062261 |
Abstract
Vascular dementia (VaD) is recognised as a neurocognitive disorder, which is explained by numerous vascular causes in the general absence of other pathologies. The heterogeneity of cerebrovascular disease makes it challenging to elucidate the neuropathological substrates and mechanisms of VaD as well as vascular cognitive impairment (VCI). Consensus and accurate diagnosis of VaD relies on wide-ranging clinical, neuropsychometric and neuroimaging measures with subsequent pathological confirmation. Pathological diagnosis of suspected clinical VaD requires adequate postmortem brain sampling and rigorous assessment methods to identify important substrates. Factors that define the subtypes of VaD include the nature and extent of vascular pathologies, degree of involvement of extra and intracranial vessels and the anatomical location of tissue changes. Atherosclerotic and cardioembolic diseases appear the most common substrates of vascular brain injury or infarction. Small vessel disease characterised by arteriolosclerosis and lacunar infarcts also causes cortical and subcortical microinfarcts, which appear to be the most robust substrates of cognitive impairment. Diffuse WM changes with loss of myelin and axonal abnormalities are common to almost all subtypes of VaD. Medial temporal lobe and hippocampal atrophy accompanied by variable hippocampal sclerosis are also features of VaD as they are of Alzheimer's disease. Recent observations suggest that there is a vascular basis for neuronal atrophy in both the temporal and frontal lobes in VaD that is entirely independent of any Alzheimer pathology. Further knowledge on specific neuronal and dendro-synaptic changes in key regions resulting in executive dysfunction and other cognitive deficits, which define VCI and VaD, needs to be gathered. Hereditary arteriopathies such as cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy or CADASIL have provided insights into the mechanisms of dementia associated with cerebral small vessel disease. Greater understanding of the neurochemical and molecular investigations is needed to better define microvascular disease and vascular substrates of dementia. The investigation of relevant animal models would be valuable in exploring the pathogenesis as well as prevention of the vascular causes of cognitive impairment.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Cerebral amyloid angiopathy; Cerebrovascular degeneration; Dementia; Neuropathology; Small vessel disease; Vascular dementia
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27062261 PMCID: PMC4835512 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-016-1571-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Common and uncommon causes of stroke pathophysiology associated with cognitive impairment or dementia
| Primary or secondary vascular disorder(s)a | Common conditions | Vascular distribution | Predominant tissue changes | Form(s) of VaD/major VCD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atherosclerotic disease | Carotid and cardiac atherosclerosis | Aorta, carotid, intracranial- MCA branches | Cortical and territorial infarcts; WML | Large vessel dementia or multi-infarct dementia |
| Aorta, coronary | Infarcts, laminar necrosis, rarefaction | Hypoperfusive dementia | ||
| Embolic disease | Cardio or carotid embolism | Intracranial arteries, MCA | Large and small infarcts | Multi-infarct dementia |
| Arteriolosclerosis | Sporadic small vessel disease | Perforating and penetrating arteries, lenticulostriate arteries | Cortical infarcts, lacunar infarcts/lacunes, microinfarcts, WML | Small vessel dementia; subcortical ischaemic vascular dementia; strategic infarct dementia |
| Hypertensive vasculopathy | Hypertensive encephalopathy with impairment; strategic infarct dementia | |||
| Non-atherosclerotic non-inflammatory vasculopathies | Arterial dissections (carotid, vertebral and intracranial), fibromuscular dysplasia, dolichoectatic basilar artery, large artery kinking and coiling, radiation induced angiopathy, moyamoya disease | Vertebral, basilar, branches of MCA, mural haematoma perforating artery; SVD | No pattern of brain infarctions: haemodynamic, thromboembolic, or due to occlusion of a perforating artery. Subarachnoid haemorrhage; lacunar infarcts, PVS | Vascular cognitive impairment |
| Aneurysms—saccular, berry, fusiform, cerebral | Circle of Willis, proximal branches of MCA, PCA | Haemorraghic infarcts, herniation | Haemorrhagic dementia | |
| Vascular malformations: cavernous hemiangioma, arteriovenous, capillary | Cortical lobes | Rarefaction, WML | Vascular cognitive impairment | |
| Cerebral venous thrombosis | Venous sinus, periventricular veins | Subcortical infarcts (thalamus), lobar haemorrhages | ||
| Amyloid angiopathies | Hereditary CAAs (amyloid β, prion protein, cystatin C, transthyretin, gelsolin) | Leptomeninges, intracerebral arteries | Cortical microinfarcts, lacunar infarcts, WML | Vascular cognitive impairment, dementia |
| Monogenic stroke disorders | CADASIL, CARASIL, retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukodystrophies (RVCLs), Moyamoya disease, hereditary angiopathy, nephropathy, aneurysm and muscle cramps (HANAC) | Leptomeningeal arteries, intracerebral subcortical arteries | Lacunar infarcts/lacunes, microinfarcts, WML | Vascular cognitive impairment, dementia |
| Monogenic disorders involving stroke | Fabry disease, familial hemiplegic migraine, hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia, vascular Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, Marfan syndrome, psuedoxanthoma elasticum, arterial tortuosity syndrome, Loeys–Dietz syndrome, polycystic kidney disease; neurofibromatosis type 1 (von Ricklinghausen disease), Carney syndrome (facial lentiginosis and myxoma) | Branching arteries | Cortical and subcortical infarcts, haemorraghic infarcts | Vascular cognitive impairment, dementia |
| Metabolic disorders | Mitochondrial disorders (MELAS, MERRF, Leigh’s disease, MIRAS), Menkes disease, homocystinuria, Tangier’s disease | Intracerebral small arteries, territorial arteries | Cortical and subcortical stroke-like lesions, microcystic cavitation, cortical petechial haemorrhages, gliosis, WML | Vascular cognitive impairment |
| Haematological disorders | Paraproteinaemia, coagulopathies (antiphospholipid antibodies, SLE, nephrotic syndrome, Sneddon syndrome, deficiencies in clotting cascade factors, e.g. protein S, C, Z, antithrombin III, plasminogen) | Large and intracerebral arteries | Cortical and subcortical infarcts, ICH and subarachnoid haemorrhages | Vascular cognitive impairment |
| Vasospastic disorders | Subarachnoid haemorrhage, migraine-related strokes, paroxysmal hypertension, drug-induced vasoconstriction | Intracranial arteries, MCA | Cortical and subcortical small infarcts | Vascular cognitive impairment |
Data summarised from several source references [28, 52, 53, 88]. Several disorders may also occur with other co-morbidities such as coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia, hypercoagulability, renal disease, atrial fibrillation and valvular heart disease
CAA cerebral amyloid angiopathy, CADASIL cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, CARASIL cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, ICH intracerebral haemorrhage, MCA middle cerebral artery, MELAS mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes, MERRF myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres, MIRAS mitochondrial recessive ataxic syndrome, PCA posterior cerebral artery, PVS perivascular spaces, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, SVD small vessel disease, VaD vascular dementia, VCD vascular cognitive disorder, WML white matter lesion
aOther miscellaneous causes of stroke including mechanical, invention induced or rare genetic syndromes such as trauma, iatrogenic, decompression sickness, air or fat embolism and transplantation and Werner’s syndrome can lead to cognitive impairment
bVCI determined when two or more cognitive domains are affected per minimal harmonisation guidelines or minor VCD [72, 146]
Pathological lesions in CVD for neuropathology reporting
| Key variables for pathological diagnosis |
| Ischaemic or haemorrhagic infarct(s) |
| Is the haemorrhagic lesion(s) a major component? |
| Gross pathological featuresa |
| Atherosclerosis (basal, peripheral or meningeal), large infarcts, haemorrhage, herniation, malformations, atrophy |
| Microscopic vascular changesb |
| Microvascular disease (sporadic, hyertensive) |
| Microvascular disease (e.g. CAA) |
| Other microangiopathies |
| Small vessel disease changes: lipohyalinosis; fibroid necrosis, hyalinisation, collagenosis |
| Perivascular dilatation |
| Parenchymal changesb |
| Location: cortex, WM, basal ganglia, brainstem (pontine), cerebellum |
| Circulation involved: arterial territories—anterior, middle or posterior |
| Laterality: right or left anterior and posterior |
| Sizes/number of infarcts = dimension: 0–4, 5–15, 16–30, 31 > 50 mm |
| Microinfarction; <5 mm determined as small or microinfarcts |
| Lacunes and lacunar infarcts: |
| Leukoencephalopathy (WMD): anterior vs. posterior; periventricular vs deep WM |
| Rarefaction/incomplete or subinfarctive ischemic injury |
| Degree of perivascular and parenchymal gliosis: mild, moderate or severe |
| Hippocampal sclerosis: mild, moderate and severe |
| Alzheimer pathology (NFT, neuritic plaque staging). >stage III = mixed AD and VaD |
CAA cerebral amyloid angiopathy, CVD cerebrovascular disease, NFT neurofibrillary tangles, WM white matter, WMD white matter disease
a Gross examination The protocol for examination of brains from CVD subjects is essentially similar to that for any other disease. The routine includes looking for sites and volumes of haemorrhages, herniation, malformations, swelling or oedema and atrophy. Any extradural, subdural or subarachnoid haemorrhage(s) that has occurred should be noted. There may be signs of ruptured aneurysms, cortical lacerations, burst intracranial haemorrhage and leakage of intraventricular haemorrhage through the cerebellar foramina. The basal cerebral arteries and vertebro-basilar arteries and the main branches can be checked for the degrees of atheroma and the presence of thrombosis. Open branch points, for example, at the trifurcation of the internal carotid and middle cerebral artery are common sites for emboli. Vascular abnormalities may include aneurysms, clips and endovascular coils and malformations. The leptomeninges should be assessed for thickness and translucency, which may be altered much with age
bFor reporting purposes, each of the above features can be scored numerically to provide a summary [72]. For example, 0 is absent and 1 means present. Less frequent lesions including watershed infarcts and laminar necrosis. Increasing numerical value may also be assigned to the infarcts
How was the burden of vascular pathology assessed in ageing and dementia studies?
| Study [ref.] | Type of sample | Sample size | Brain regions | Vascular lesions (VLs)/vascular brain injury (VBI) | Scoring system | Dementia criteria and cognitive tests |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CFAS [ | Ageing | 209 | 12 standard sections | Infarct, small vessel disease (arteriolosclerosis), CAA, periarteriolar myelin attenuation with gliosis, leukoencephalopathy | CERAD, 0–3 (none, mild moderate, severe) | MMSE, AGECAT |
| Rochester Epidemiology Project [ | Ageing | 89 | Ten standard sections | Large infarcts, lacunes, (assessed bilaterally in grey and white matter), leukoencephalopathy | % frequency | DSM-IV, NINDS-ARIEN, ADDTC, ICD-10 |
| Geriatric and Psychiatric Hospitals, Geneva [ | Mixed | 156 | Six large coronal section | Lacunes, cortical microinfarcts diffuse, CAA, focal gliosis, periventricular and deep WM demyelination | Vascular score (CMI and thalamic and basal ganglia lacune score), 0–20 | CDR (0–3) |
| Rush Memory and Ageing Project [ | Ageing, AD | 148 | 8–9 standard sections | Macroscopic and microscopic infarcts (acute, subacute, chronic). | % infarcts | MMMSE, Complex Ideational Material, NINDS-ADRDA |
| Bronx Ageing Study, Einstein Ageing Study, AE Nursing Home study [ | AD, VaD, Mixed | 190 | 15 standard sections | Large infarcts, lacunes, leukoencephalopathy | Vascular lesion score, 0–6 | DSM-IIIR, DSM-IV, NINDS-ADRDA, ADDTC |
| HAAS [ | Ageing, AD | 436 | Eight standard sections | Large infarcts, lacunes, microinfarcts, leukoencephalopathy (myelin loss with gliosis), haemorrhages | % infarcts, median no. 25th and 75th percentiles | CASI, CDR (0–3) |
| Adult Changes in Thought study [ | Ageing | 219 | 10 standard sections | Macroinfarcts (<1 or >1 cm), microinfarcts, leukoencephalopathy (myelin loss), haemorrhages | Frequency of lesions | DSM-IIIR, DSIM-IV, NIA-Reagan Institute |
| NACC [ | AD | 4629 | 12 standard sections | Large infarcts, lacunes, microinfarcts, leukoencephalopathy (myelin loss), haemorrhages, atherosclerosis (CW), arteriolosclerosis, CAA | % VLs, plus 0–3 (none, mild moderate, severe) | DSM-IIIR, DSIM-IV, NIA-Reagan Institute |
| Oxford [ | CVD, VaD | 61 | Six standard sections | Large infarcts, lacunes, microinfarcts, CAA, cribriform change, perivascular spacing and arteriolosclerosis (SVD), atherosclerosis (CW) | Infarcts graded (no, single, multiple); SVD and atheromas, 0–3 | MMSE, CAMDEX, Kew test |
| OPTIMA [ | Ageing, AD | 70 | Four standard sections | Small infarcts, microinfarcts, leukoencephalopathy | SVD 0–3 (none, mild, moderate, severe) | MMSE, CAMCOG |
| CogFAST [ | AD, VaD, Mixed, DLB | 135; 226 | Four large coronal sections | Large and small infarcts, lacunes, microinfarcts, arteriolosclerosis, CAA, perivascular hemosiderin leakage, perivascular spaces, leukoencephalopathy (myelin loss) | Vascular score, 0–20 | DSM-IIR, DSM-IV, MMSE, CAMCOG |
Essential data taken from several references as shown
AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADDTC Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnostic and Treatment Centers, AGECAT automated geriatric examination for computer-assisted taxonomy, CAA cerebral amyloid angiopathy, CASI Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument, CAMCOG Cambridge Cognitive Examination, CAMDEX Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders, CDR Clinical Dementia Rating, CFAS Cognitive Function in Ageing Study, CVD cerebrovascular disease, DLB dementia with Lewy bodies, HAAS Honolulu Asia-Aging Study, Mixed mixed dementia both AD and VaD, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, NACC National Alzheimer's Coordinating Centre, VaD vascular dementia, VLs vascular lesions
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of different cerebrovascular pathologies associated with dementia. The proposed Newcastle categorisation includes six subtypes [90]. In all the above, the age of the vascular lesion(s) should correspond with the time when the disease began. The post-stroke survivors are usually included in subtypes I–III. While these may not be different from other published subtypes [84], they are practical and simple to use. Cases with extensive WM disease in the absence of significant other features are included under SVD. *Subtype I may result from large vessel occlusion (atherothromboembolism), artery to artery embolism or cardioembolism. Subtype II usually involves descriptions of arteriosclerosis, lipohyalinosis and hypertensive, arteriosclerotic, amyloid or collagen angiopathy. Subtypes I, II and V may result from aneurysms, arterial dissections, arteriovenous malformations and various forms of arteritis (vasculitis). AD Alzheimer’s disease, CH cerebral haemorrhage, CVD cerebrovascular disease, MI myocardial infarction, MID multi-infarct dementia, LVD large vessel disease, SIVD subcortical ischaemic vascular dementia, SVD small vessel disease, VCI vascular cognitive impairment, VaD vascular dementia
Fig. 2Sampling of postmortem brain tissue for assessing vascular pathology. Coronal blocks from one hemisphere (rostral to caudal) of the cerebrum for an ‘ideal’ sample for neuropathological assessment. In Newcastle, large sections are taken as indicated by the pink and green blocks identified by the letters. A minimum sample constituting four to six large blocks including S, Y/W, F/J, G/H, AB/AD and AL can be reliably used to determine the burden of vascular pathology [39]
Markers and quantification of vascular pathology and cells in CVD
| Pathology | Quantitative method(s) | Stain/markers | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood vessels | ||||
| Arteries | Atherosclerosis | Visual grading of degree (0–3 scale) of stenosis in basal (Circle of Willis) arteries. Validated by comparison with detailed cross-sectional measurements in vessel segments | H&E | [ |
| Arteriolosclerosis | Sclerotic index (SI)-ratio of outer and internal diameters; degree of loss of VSMC (0–3 scale) | H&E | [ | |
| Amyloid angiopathy | CAA rating: parenchymal and meningeal 0–3 scale, capillary CAA as present/absent and vasculopathy 0–2 scale | Aβ peptides; H&E | [ | |
| Veins | Collagenosis | Degree of wall thickening (0–3 scale) | COL4; H&E, Masson trichrome | [ |
| Capillaries | Endothelium | EC degeneration, capillary length density (2D/3D stereology) | GLUT1, CD31; ICAM-1 | [ |
| Basement membrane | Measurement of thickness of capillary wall | COL4, Laminin | [ | |
| Parenchymal changes | Large infarcts (3 × 3 × 2 cm) | Lesion counts 1–3 | H&E | [ |
| Small infarcts/lacunes (0.5 × 0.3 × 0.2 cm) | Lesion counts >3 | H&E | [ | |
| Microinfarcts <0.2 cm | Lesion counts >3 | H&E | [ | |
| Perivascular spaces | Density (0–3); volume measurements | H&E; LFB | [ | |
| White matter | Myelin loss | Myelin index (MI); ratio of loss against total density. Myelin-associated glycoprotein to proteolipid protein 1 (MAG:PLP1) ratio | LFB, Loyez; MAG, PLP | [ |
| Axons | Axonal (light and electron) | NF, SMI32, APP | [ | |
| Oligodendrocytes | Cell counts | [ | ||
| Choroid plexus | Epithelial cells | Cell density or counts of Biondi rings inclusions | GLUT1; Thioflavin S, Tight junction proteins | [ |
| Reactive Cells | Astrogliosis | Hyperplasia, hypertrophy; density by in vitro imaging | GFAP, ADH1L1 | [ |
| Microglia | Reactivity, proliferation; density by in vitro imaging | CD68, Iba1 | [ | |
| Infiltrating cells | Leukocytes, neutrophils, macrophages | Perivascular cuffing (0–3 scale), perivascular cell density in contact or within 0.5 mm circumference | CD4, Iba1, various markers | [ |
| Neurons | Neuronal number | 3D stereology | NeuN, SMI31 | [ |
| Neuronal volume | 3D stereology | H&E | [ | |
| Sclerosis (hippocampal) | HS by visual grading Type 0–4 | H&E; neurodegenerative pathology antigens | [ | |
Information retrieved from several references as shown. This is not an exhaustive list.
Aβ amyloid β, ADH1L1 aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family, member L1, APP amyloid precursor protein, COL4 collagen IV, GFAP glial fibrillary acidic protein, GLUT1 glucose transporter 1, H&E haematoxylin and eosin, HS hippocampal sclerosis, ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule-1, LFB luxol fast blue, MAG myelin associated protein, NeuN neuronal N protein, PLP proteolipoprotein
Fig. 3Pathological outcomes of clinically diagnosed VaD. Mixed type 1 revealed large infracts, whereas mixed type 2 predominantly exhibited SVD with microinfarction. Other included Lewy body disease, dementia, mild Parkinson disease and depression. AD Alzheimer’s disease
Fig. 4Pathological features associated with SVD in VaD. Panels show examples of lacunes, small infarcts and microinfarcts. a Typical cavitated lacunar lesions (arrow) in the putamen of a 65-year-old man. b WM attenuation in the medial temporal lobe, but sparing of U fibres. Section from an 80-year-old man with vascular and neurofibrillary pathology. c, d Cerebral microvessels with variable hyalinosis, perivascular rarefaction, microinfarcts and perivascular spaces in two different cases. Moderate gliosis in the surrounding region is also evident in the case in c. d Perivascular dilatation (or spacing) in the WM (arrow). Magnification bar a 1 cm, b 500 μm, c, d 100 μm
Fig. 5WM lesions visualised by conventional histopathological staining in a 69-year-old man diagnosed with vascular encephalopathy (and VaD). a >75 % stenosis in the internal carotid artery 8 mm above the bifurcation. The narrowed lumen (arrow) is seen. b Severe WM changes in the parietal lobe in this patient. Braak staging was graded as IV, but there were no neuritic or cored plaques. c Postmortem T2W magnetic resonance image of a formalin-fixed block from the parietal lobe. The area of hypersignal can be seen in the WM (asterisk). d H&E stained section from the block in c showing severe deep WM pallor in the area of hypertensity (asterisk). A small cortical infarct is also seen (arrow). Magnification bar a 500 mm, b 400 μm, c 1 cm, d 500 μm
Fig. 6CAA and infarcts in a 92-year-old woman with memory loss, confusional state and disorientation. CT on admission showed infarction in the right posterior parieto-occipital region. Small lacunar infarct in the posterior aspect of the left corona radiata, probable area of cortical infarction in the left occipital lobe. a Lobar haemorrhage in the frontal lobe. b Macroscopical cortical infarcts in both right and left occipital lobes. c, d Cortical and subarachnoidal arterioles showing thickened homogenous eosinophilic walls. Inset in c, two strongly stained eosinophilic vessels. e Aβ immunohistochemistry shows extensive subarachnoidal and cortical amyloid angiopathy. f A cortical microinfarct with haemosiderin. There were numerous microinfarcts in the frontal, parietal and occipital cortices. Subject only showed sparse cored and diffuse senile plaques and Braak stage II for neurofibrillary pathology. Magnification bar a, b 1 cm, c–f 100 μm
Sampling of tissue and fluids for diagnosis of uncommon causes of CVD
| Diagnostic sample | Diagnostic test | Target diagnoses |
|---|---|---|
| Tissue biopsy | Arterial | Temporal or giant cell arteritis, Sneddon syndrome |
| Cerebral meninges | Primary cerebral vasculitides | |
| Muscle | CADASIL, mitochondrial diseases | |
| Skin | CADASIL, CARASIL, Sneddon syndrome, psuedoxanthoma elasticum and unexplained skin lesions with CNS manifestations | |
| CSF | GLA activity | Fabry disease |
| Inflammatory cells | Vasculitides, sarcoidosis, CNS infections | |
| Serum | Viral, bacterial | Specific infections |
| ANA, ENA and anti DNA antibodies, complement | Systemic lupus erythematosus, connective tissue diseases | |
| Protein electrophoresis | Paraproteinaemia | |
| Hb electrophoresis | Sickle cell anaemia (HbS), thalassaemia | |
| Serum and urine | Toxicology | Illicit drug use |
| Ammonium | Glutaric acidaemia type 1 and 2, urea cycle disorders | |
| Lactic acidosis | Branch-chained organic acidurias, glutaric acidaemia type 1 and 2, mitochondrial diseases | |
| Thrombophilia | Antithrombin, protein C, protein S, antiphospholipid antibodies (lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin, β2-glycoprotein), homocysteine, factor V Leiden, prothrombin, MTHRF, factor XII |
Data adapted from several references [88, 161]. Other rare conditions with stroke injury such as syphilis, systemic vasculitides and rheumatic diseases may also be diagnosed from CSF
ANA antinuclear antibodies, ENA extractable nuclear antigens, CADASIL cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, CARASIL cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, CNS central nervous system, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, GLA galactosidase alpha, Hb haemoglobin, MTHRF methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase