Association of brain microbleeds with risk factors, cognition, and MRI markers in MESA

INTRODUCTION Little is known about the epidemiology of brain microbleeds in racially/ethnically diverse populations. METHODS In the Multi‐Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, brain microbleeds were identified from 3T magnetic resonance imaging susceptibility‐weighted imaging sequences using deep learnin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Alzheimer's & dementia 2023-09, Vol.19 (9), p.4139-4149
Hauptverfasser: Jensen, Paul N., Rashid, Tanweer, Ware, Jeffrey B., Cui, Yuhan, Sitlani, Colleen M., Austin, Thomas R., Longstreth, W. T., Bertoni, Alain G., Mamourian, Elizabeth, Bryan, R. Nick, Nasrallah, Ilya M., Habes, Mohamad, Heckbert, Susan R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:INTRODUCTION Little is known about the epidemiology of brain microbleeds in racially/ethnically diverse populations. METHODS In the Multi‐Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, brain microbleeds were identified from 3T magnetic resonance imaging susceptibility‐weighted imaging sequences using deep learning models followed by radiologist review. RESULTS Among 1016 participants without prior stroke (25% Black, 15% Chinese, 19% Hispanic, 41% White, mean age 72), microbleed prevalence was 20% at age 60 to 64.9 and 45% at ≥85 years. Deep microbleeds were associated with older age, hypertension, higher body mass index, and atrial fibrillation, and lobar microbleeds with male sex and atrial fibrillation. Overall, microbleeds were associated with greater white matter hyperintensity volume and lower total white matter fractional anisotropy. DISCUSSION Results suggest differing associations for lobar versus deep locations. Sensitive microbleed quantification will facilitate future longitudinal studies of their potential role as an early indicator of vascular pathology.
ISSN:1552-5260
1552-5279
1552-5279
DOI:10.1002/alz.13346