| Literature DB >> 34699267 |
Joanna M Wardlaw1, Helene Benveniste2, Anna Williams3.
Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is highly prevalent and a common cause of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke and dementia, yet the pathophysiology is poorly understood. Its clinical expression is highly varied, and prognostic implications are frequently overlooked in clinics; thus, treatment is currently confined to vascular risk factor management. Traditionally, SVD is considered the small vessel equivalent of large artery stroke (occlusion, rupture), but data emerging from human neuroimaging and genetic studies refute this, instead showing microvessel endothelial dysfunction impacting on cell-cell interactions and leading to brain damage. These dysfunctions reflect defects that appear to be inherited and secondary to environmental exposures, including vascular risk factors. Interrogation in preclinical models shows consistent and converging molecular and cellular interactions across the endothelial-glial-neural unit that increasingly explain the human macroscopic observations and identify common patterns of pathology despite different triggers. Importantly, these insights may offer new targets for therapeutic intervention focused on restoring endothelial-glial physiology.Entities:
Keywords: blood–brain barrier; cerebrovascular reactivity; dementia; phospholipid flippase; small vessel disease; stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34699267 DOI: 10.1146/annurev-physiol-060821-014521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Physiol ISSN: 0066-4278 Impact factor: 19.318