Literature DB >> 30480463

The stronger one-sided relative hypoperfusion, the more pronounced ipsilateral spatial attentional bias in patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis.

Jens Göttler1,2,3,4, Stephan Kaczmarz1,2,4, Rachel Nuttall1,2, Vanessa Griese1,2, Natan Napiórkowski5,6, Michael Kallmayer7, Isabel Wustrow8, Hans-Henning Eckstein7, Claus Zimmer1, Christine Preibisch1,2,9, Kathrin Finke5,10, Christian Sorg1,2,11.   

Abstract

Patients with asymptomatic, high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis often suffer from subtle cognitive impairments with unclear underlying neuro-cognitive mechanisms. Thus, we hypothesized that stenosis-related unilateral cerebral hypoperfusion leads to an ipsilateral attentional bias; 22 patients with asymptomatic, one-sided high-grade carotid stenosis and 24 age-matched healthy controls underwent pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling to assess brain perfusion in the territory of the carotid arteries. Furthermore, a parametric assessment of attention functions was carried out on the basis of the computational Theory of Visual Attention. Both patients' perfusion and spatial attention were significantly more lateralized than those of healthy controls. Critically, both asymmetry indices were significantly correlated in patients, i.e. the stronger one-sided relative hypoperfusion, the stronger ipsilateral bias of attention. This association was specifically pronounced in parietal cortices and independent of white matter hyperintensities as a surrogate for cerebrovascular brain damage. Results provide evidence for a link between lateralized hypoperfusion and lateralized attentional weighting in asymptomatic, high-grade carotid stenosis. Data suggest that lateralized hypoperfusion with simultaneous spatial attentional bias might serve as a potential therapeutic target in one-sided carotid stenosis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cerebral blood flow; Theory of Visual Attention; asymptomatic carotid stenosis; hypoperfusion; spatial attentional bias

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30480463      PMCID: PMC7370612          DOI: 10.1177/0271678X18815790

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab        ISSN: 0271-678X            Impact factor:   6.200


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