Mohamed T Eldehni1, Aghogho Odudu2, Christopher W Mcintyre3. 1. Department of Renal Medicine, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, UK. 2. Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK. 3. Division of Nephrology, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Structural and functional brain white matter abnormalities are poorly characterized in patients with end-stage kidney disease. METHODS: We examined the prevalence of the brain white matter microstructure disruption using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging and its association with hemodynamic performance and cognitive defects in 49 incident hemodialysis (HD) patients and compared these to 25 age-matched normal controls. We analyzed fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) maps of the images, a voxelwise statistical analysis was done using tract-based spatial statistics. Hemodynamic assessment was done using extrema points analysis model of continuous blood pressure monitoring. FINDINGS: We found significant white matter damage in HD patients compared with normal controls (peak FA 0.471 ± 0.031 vs 0.486 ± 0.022 P = 0.023, peak MD 0.00194 ± 0.000363 10-3 mm2 .s-1 vs 0.00167 ± 0.0003 10-3 mm2 .s-1 P = 0.002). There was diffuse pattern of white matter damage in HD patients, which was independent of age, gender, and the presence of ischaemic heart disease and diabetes with significantly lower FA values in HD patients than normal controls (0.467 ± 0.037 vs 0.507 ± 0.026, P < 0.05 corrected for family wise error. HD patients had worse cognitive scores that correlated with white matter damage (for peak FA, Montreal cognitive assessment r = 0.478 P = 0.001, Trail A r = -0.486 P = 0.001, Trail B r = -0.464 P = 0.001; for peak MD, Montreal cognitive assessment r = -0.533 P < 0.001, Trail A r = 0.641 P < 0.001, Trail B r = 0.514 P < 0.001). In a multivariable linear regression analysis that included age, smoking, the presence of ischaemic heart disease, and diabetes mellitus, higher frequency of mean arterial blood pressure extrema points during HD was independently associated with white matter damage (β = -0.296, P = 0.036, Adjusted R2 for the whole model = 0.400). DISCUSSION: End-stage kidney disease patients on HD have more brain white matter damage and cognitive impairment than age-matched controls that are linked to hemodynamic functional measures.
INTRODUCTION:Structural and functional brain white matter abnormalities are poorly characterized in patients with end-stage kidney disease. METHODS: We examined the prevalence of the brain white matter microstructure disruption using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging and its association with hemodynamic performance and cognitive defects in 49 incident hemodialysis (HD) patients and compared these to 25 age-matched normal controls. We analyzed fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) maps of the images, a voxelwise statistical analysis was done using tract-based spatial statistics. Hemodynamic assessment was done using extrema points analysis model of continuous blood pressure monitoring. FINDINGS: We found significant white matter damage in HDpatients compared with normal controls (peak FA 0.471 ± 0.031 vs 0.486 ± 0.022 P = 0.023, peak MD 0.00194 ± 0.000363 10-3 mm2 .s-1 vs 0.00167 ± 0.0003 10-3 mm2 .s-1 P = 0.002). There was diffuse pattern of white matter damage in HDpatients, which was independent of age, gender, and the presence of ischaemic heart disease and diabetes with significantly lower FA values in HDpatients than normal controls (0.467 ± 0.037 vs 0.507 ± 0.026, P < 0.05 corrected for family wise error. HDpatients had worse cognitive scores that correlated with white matter damage (for peak FA, Montreal cognitive assessment r = 0.478 P = 0.001, Trail A r = -0.486 P = 0.001, Trail B r = -0.464 P = 0.001; for peak MD, Montreal cognitive assessment r = -0.533 P < 0.001, Trail A r = 0.641 P < 0.001, Trail B r = 0.514 P < 0.001). In a multivariable linear regression analysis that included age, smoking, the presence of ischaemic heart disease, and diabetes mellitus, higher frequency of mean arterial blood pressure extrema points during HD was independently associated with white matter damage (β = -0.296, P = 0.036, Adjusted R2 for the whole model = 0.400). DISCUSSION: End-stage kidney diseasepatients on HD have more brain white matter damage and cognitive impairment than age-matched controls that are linked to hemodynamic functional measures.
Authors: Michael Kolland; Edith Hofer; Lukas Pirpamer; Daniela Eibl; Christian Enzinger; Alexander R Rosenkranz; Reinhold Schmidt Journal: Aging (Albany NY) Date: 2022-01-13 Impact factor: 5.682
Authors: Sheetal Chaudhuri; Hao Han; Caitlin Monaghan; John Larkin; Peter Waguespack; Brian Shulman; Zuwen Kuang; Srikanth Bellamkonda; Jane Brzozowski; Jeffrey Hymes; Mike Black; Peter Kotanko; Jeroen P Kooman; Franklin W Maddux; Len Usvyat Journal: BMC Nephrol Date: 2021-08-09 Impact factor: 2.388