White matter network damage mediates association between cerebrovascular disease and cognition

To determine whether white matter network disruption mediates the association between MRI markers of cerebrovascular disease (CeVD) and cognitive impairment. Participants (n = 253, aged ≥60 years) from the Epidemiology of Dementia in Singapore study underwent neuropsychological assessments and MRI....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism 2021-08, Vol.41 (8), p.1858-1872
Hauptverfasser: Hilal, Saima, Liu, Siwei, Wong, Tien Yin, Vrooman, Henri, Cheng, Ching-Yu, Venketasubramanian, Narayanaswamy, Chen, Christopher LH, Zhou, Juan Helen
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container_end_page 1872
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1858
container_title Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism
container_volume 41
creator Hilal, Saima
Liu, Siwei
Wong, Tien Yin
Vrooman, Henri
Cheng, Ching-Yu
Venketasubramanian, Narayanaswamy
Chen, Christopher LH
Zhou, Juan Helen
description To determine whether white matter network disruption mediates the association between MRI markers of cerebrovascular disease (CeVD) and cognitive impairment. Participants (n = 253, aged ≥60 years) from the Epidemiology of Dementia in Singapore study underwent neuropsychological assessments and MRI. CeVD markers were defined as lacunes, white matter hyperintensities (WMH), microbleeds, cortical microinfarcts, cortical infarcts and intracranial stenosis (ICS). White matter microstructure damage was measured as fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity by tract based spatial statistics from diffusion tensor imaging. Cognitive function was summarized as domain-specific Z-scores. Lacunar counts, WMH volume and ICS were associated with worse performance in executive function, attention, language, verbal and visual memory. These three CeVD markers were also associated with white matter microstructural damage in the projection, commissural, association, and limbic fibers. Path analyses showed that lacunar counts, higher WMH volume and ICS were associated with executive and verbal memory impairment via white matter disruption in commissural fibers whereas impairment in the attention, visual memory and language were mediated through projection fibers. Our study shows that the abnormalities in white matter connectivity may underlie the relationship between CeVD and cognition. Further longitudinal studies are needed to understand the cause-effect relationship between CeVD, white matter damage and cognition.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0271678X21990980
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Participants (n = 253, aged ≥60 years) from the Epidemiology of Dementia in Singapore study underwent neuropsychological assessments and MRI. CeVD markers were defined as lacunes, white matter hyperintensities (WMH), microbleeds, cortical microinfarcts, cortical infarcts and intracranial stenosis (ICS). White matter microstructure damage was measured as fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity by tract based spatial statistics from diffusion tensor imaging. Cognitive function was summarized as domain-specific Z-scores. Lacunar counts, WMH volume and ICS were associated with worse performance in executive function, attention, language, verbal and visual memory. These three CeVD markers were also associated with white matter microstructural damage in the projection, commissural, association, and limbic fibers. Path analyses showed that lacunar counts, higher WMH volume and ICS were associated with executive and verbal memory impairment via white matter disruption in commissural fibers whereas impairment in the attention, visual memory and language were mediated through projection fibers. Our study shows that the abnormalities in white matter connectivity may underlie the relationship between CeVD and cognition. 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subjects Aged
Attention
Brain - diagnostic imaging
Brain - pathology
Cerebrovascular Disorders - complications
Cerebrovascular Disorders - diagnostic imaging
Cerebrovascular Disorders - pathology
Cognitive Dysfunction - complications
Cognitive Dysfunction - diagnosis
Female
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Memory
Middle Aged
Original
White Matter - physiopathology
White Matter - ultrastructure
title White matter network damage mediates association between cerebrovascular disease and cognition
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