Cognitive impact of cerebral microbleeds in patients with symptomatic small vessel disease

Background and aim Whether cerebral microbleeds cause cognitive impairment remains uncertain. We analyzed whether cerebral microbleeds are associated with cognitive dysfunction in patients with symptomatic cerebral small vessel disease, and whether this association is independent of other neuroimagi...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of stroke 2022-04, Vol.17 (4), p.415-424
Hauptverfasser: Nannoni, Stefania, Ohlmeier, Laura, Brown, Robin B, Morris, Robin G, MacKinnon, Andrew D, Markus, Hugh S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background and aim Whether cerebral microbleeds cause cognitive impairment remains uncertain. We analyzed whether cerebral microbleeds are associated with cognitive dysfunction in patients with symptomatic cerebral small vessel disease, and whether this association is independent of other neuroimaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease. Methods We analyzed consecutive patients with MRI-confirmed lacunar stroke included in DNA-Lacunar-2 multicenter study. Cerebral microbleeds were graded using the Brain Observer Microbleed Rating Scale (BOMBS). Neuropsychological assessment was performed using the Brief Memory and Executive Test (BMET). We analyzed the association between cerebral microbleeds, BMET, and the following subdomains: executive function/processing speed and orientation/memory. We also searched for an independent association between cerebral microbleeds and vascular cognitive impairment, defined as BMET ≤ 13. Results Out of 688 included patients, cerebral microbleeds were detected in 192 (27.9%). After adjusting for white matter hyperintensities severity, lacune count, and other confounders, both the presence and the number of cerebral microbleeds were significantly associated with impaired cognitive performance [β = −13.0; 95% CI = (−25.3, −0.6) and β = −13.1; 95% CI = (−19.8, −6.4), respectively]. On analysis of specific cognitive domains, associations were present for executive function/processing speed [β = −5.8; 95% CI = (−9.3, −2.2) and β = −4.3; 95% CI = (−6.2, −2.4), respectively] but not for orientation/memory [β = −0.4; 95% CI = (−4.0, 3.2) and β = −2.1; 95% CI = (−4.0, 0.1), respectively]. We also found an independent association between the presence and the number of cerebral microbleeds and vascular cognitive impairment [adjusted OR = 1.48; 95% CI = (1.01, 2.18) and OR = 1.43; 95% CI = (1.15, 1.79), respectively]. Conclusion In a large cohort of symptomatic cerebral small vessel disease patients, after controlling for other neuroimaging markers of cerebral small vessel disease severity, cerebral microbleeds were associated with cognitive dysfunction. Executive function and processing speed were predominantly impaired. This might suggest a causal role of cerebral microbleeds in determining vascular cognitive impairment.
ISSN:1747-4930
1747-4949
DOI:10.1177/17474930211012837