| Literature DB >> 27598537 |
Dewen Meng1, Akram A Hosseini1, Richard J Simpson1, Quratulain Shaikh1, Christopher R Tench1, Robert A Dineen1, Dorothee P Auer1.
Abstract
Purpose To investigate associations between neuroimaging markers of cerebrovascular disease, including lesion topography and extent and severity of strategic and global cerebral tissue injury, and cognition in carotid artery disease (CAD). Materials and Methods All participants gave written informed consent to undergo brain magnetic resonance imaging and the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised. One hundred eight patients with symptomatic CAD but no dementia were included, and a score less than 82 represented cognitive impairment. Group comparison and interrelations between global cognitive and fluency performance, lesion topography, and ultrastructural damage were assessed with voxel-based statistics. Associations between cognition, medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA), lesion volumes, and global white matter ultrastructural damage indexed as increased mean diffusivity were tested with regression analysis by controlling for age. Diagnostic accuracy of imaging markers selected from a multivariate prediction model was tested with receiver operating characteristic analysis. Results Cognitively impaired patients (n = 53 [49.1%], classified as having probable vascular cognitive disorder) were older than nonimpaired patients (P = .027) and had more frequent MTA (P < .001), more cortical infarctions (P = .016), and larger volumes of acute (P = .028) and chronic (P = .009) subcortical ischemic lesions. Lesion volumes did not correlate with global cognitive performance (lacunar infarctions, P = .060; acute lesions, P = .088; chronic subcortical ischemic lesions, P = .085). In contrast, cognitive performance correlated with presence of chronic ischemic lesions within the interhemispheric tracts and thalamic radiation (P < .05, false discovery rate corrected). Skeleton mean diffusivity showed the closest correlation with cognition (R2 = 0.311, P < .001) and promising diagnostic accuracy for vascular cognitive disorder (area under the curve, 0.82 [95% confidence interval: 0.75, 0.90]). Findings were confirmed in subjects with a low risk of preclinical Alzheimer disease indexed by the absence of MTA (n = 85). Conclusion Subcortical white matter ischemic lesion locations and severity of ultrastructural tract damage contribute to cognitive impairment in symptomatic CAD, which suggests that subcortical disconnection within large-scale cognitive neural networks is a key mechanism of vascular cognitive disorder. Online supplemental material is available for this article.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27598537 PMCID: PMC5283872 DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2016152685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiology ISSN: 0033-8419 Impact factor: 11.105
Demographics, MR Imaging Characteristics, and Cognitive Profile of the Study Cohort and Comparison between Cognitive Subgroups
Note.—Numbers in parentheses are percentages.
*Data are means ± standard deviations.
†Statistically significant (P < .05).
‡Threshold for possible hemodynamic impairment > 80%—that is, subgroup of >70%. P value refers to >80% vs rest.
Lesion Volumes, MTA, and Cognition
medial temporal lobe atrophy
Note.—Numbers in parentheses are percentages.
*P value for the comparison between cognitively impaired patients with MTA and those without MTA, controlled for age.
medial temporal lobe atrophy
medial temporal lobe atrophy
†P value for the comparison between patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition, controlled for age.
‡P value for the comparison between patients with MTA and patients without MTA, controlled for age.
medial temporal lobe atrophy
medial temporal lobe atrophy
§P value for the correlation between lesion volumes and global cognitive performance, controlled for age.
||P value for the correlation between lesion volumes and fluency, controlled for age.
#Data are means ± standard deviations.
**Statistically significant (P < .05).
Figure 1a:(a) Infarction maps in patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. Maps were superimposed onto the 1 × 1 × 1-mm MNI152 standard-space T1-weighted average structural template. The color bars show the variation between the minimum and maximum number of lesions. Z score maps represent the result of group comparison between patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. The significant voxels (according to results of the Fisher test) did not survive the false discovery rate correction. The color bar of the Z score maps shows the variation in Z score between the minimum and maximum values. (b) Chronic subcortical ischemic lesion frequency maps in patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. Details are the same as for a.
Montreal Neurological Institute
Figure 1b:(a) Infarction maps in patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. Maps were superimposed onto the 1 × 1 × 1-mm MNI152 standard-space T1-weighted average structural template. The color bars show the variation between the minimum and maximum number of lesions. Z score maps represent the result of group comparison between patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. The significant voxels (according to results of the Fisher test) did not survive the false discovery rate correction. The color bar of the Z score maps shows the variation in Z score between the minimum and maximum values. (b) Chronic subcortical ischemic lesion frequency maps in patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition. Details are the same as for a.
Montreal Neurological Institute
Severity of Tissue Damage and Cognitive Performance
Note.—Data are means ± standard deviations, unless indicated otherwise.
*P value for the comparison between cognitively impaired patients with MTA and those without MTA, controlled for age.
medial temporal lobe atrophy
medial temporal lobe atrophy
†P value for the comparison between patients with normal cognition and those with abnormal cognition, controlled for age.
‡P value for the comparison between patients with MTA and patients without MTA, controlled for age.
medial temporal lobe atrophy
medial temporal lobe atrophy
§P value for the age-independent correlation between mean diffusivity of chronic subcortical ischemic lesions, NAWM, WMT skeleton, and global cognitive performance.
normal-appearing white matter
white matter tract
||P value for the age-independent correlation between mean diffusivity of chronic subcortical ischemic lesions, NAWM, WMT skeleton, and global cognitive performance in subjects without MTA.
normal-appearing white matter
white matter tract
medial temporal lobe atrophy
#Statistically significant (P < .05).
MNI Coordinates for the Local Maxima of Clusters That Correlate with Cognition
Montreal Neurological Institute
Figure 2:A, Maps show the topography of chronic ischemic lesions associated with global cognitive impairment. Significant clusters (red) according to VLSM analysis (P < .05, false discovery rate corrected, controlled for age and normalized total ischemic lesion volumes after logarithmic transformation) are projected onto the MNI152 standard-space T1-weighted average structural template image with overlain selected WMTs from the Johns Hopkins University DTI-based white matter atlas (yellow, forceps major; brown, anterior thalamic radiation; blue, forceps minor). B, Maps show the topography of chronic ischemic lesions associated with impaired fluency. Details are the same as for A (green, superior longitudinal fasciculus). L = left, R = right.
voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping
Montreal Neurological Institute
white matter tract
Figure 3:A, Maps show WMT mean diffusivity and global cognition. Significant TBSS results show skeletal voxels (red) where increased mean diffusivity correlated with global cognitive decline (controlled for age and normalized total ischemic lesion volumes after logarithmic transformation, P < .05, corrected). Mean TBSS tract skeleton (green) and total ischemic lesion distribution map (yellow) were overlaid on the MNI152 standard-space T1-weighted average structural template image. B, Maps show WMT mean diffusivity and fluency. Details are the same as for A. L = left, R = right.
white matter tract
tract-based spatial statistics
tract-based spatial statistics
Montreal Neurological Institute
white matter tract
Figure 4:Scatterplots show the correlation between mean diffusivity (MD) within chronic subcortical ischemic lesions, NAWM, WMT skeleton, and global cognitive performance, corrected for age.
normal-appearing white matter
white matter tract
Figure 5:Receiver operating characteristic curves with a diagonal reference line (red) for prediction of global cognitive performance according to WMT skeleton mean diffusivity (MD, green) and MTA score (blue).
white matter tract
medial temporal lobe atrophy