Cortical Microinfarcts and White Matter Connectivity in Memory Clinic Patients
Ferro, DA; Heinen, R; de Brito Robalo, BM; Kuijf, HJ; Biessels, GJ; Reijmer, YD; Utrecht Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI) Study group
(2019) Frontiers in Neurology, volume 10, issue JUN, pp.
(Article)
Abstract
Background and purpose: Cerebral microinfarcts (CMIs) are associated with cognitive impairment and dementia. CMIs might affect cognitive performance through disruption of cerebral networks. We investigated in memory clinic patients whether cortical CMIs are clustered in specific brain regions and if presence of cortical CMIs is associated with reduced white matter
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(WM) connectivity in tracts projecting to these regions. Methods: 164 memory clinic patients with vascular brain injury with a mean age of 72 ± 11 years (54% male) were included. All underwent 3 tesla MRI, including a diffusion MRI and cognitive testing. Cortical CMIs were rated according to established criteria and their spatial location was marked. Diffusion imaging-based tractography was used to reconstruct WM connections and voxel based analysis (VBA) to assess integrity of WM directly below the cortex. WM connectivity and integrity were compared between patients with and without cortical CMIs for the whole brain and regions with a high CMI burden. Results: 30 patients (18%) had at least 1 cortical CMI [range 1–46]. More than 70% of the cortical CMIs were located in the superior frontal, middle frontal, and pre- and postcentral brain regions (covering 16% of the cortical surface). In these high CMI burden regions, presence of cortical CMIs was not associated with WM connectivity after correction for conventional neuroimaging markers of vascular injury. WM connectivity in the whole brain and WM voxels directly underneath the cortical surface did not differ between patients with and without cortical CMIs. Conclusion: Cortical CMIs displayed a strong local clustering in highly interconnected frontal, pre- and postcentral brain regions. Nevertheless, WM connections projecting to these regions were not disproportionally impaired in patients with compared to patients without cortical CMIs. Alternative mechanisms, such as focal disturbances in cortical structure and functioning, may better explain CMI associated cognitive impairment.
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Keywords: microinfarcts, cerebral small vessel disease, vascular cognitive impairment, white matter connectivity, diffusion tensor imaging, White matter connectivity, Vascular cognitive impairment, Cerebral small vessel disease, Microinfarcts, Diffusion tensor imaging, Clinical Neurology, Neurology
ISSN: 1664-2295
Publisher: Frontiers Media S. A.
Note: Funding Information: We acknowledge the support from the Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative: the Dutch Heart Foundation (CVON 2012-06 Heart Brain Connection), Dutch Federation of University Medical Centers, the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development, and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences. Funding Information: This study is supported by Vidi grant 917.11.384 and Vici Grant 918.16.616 from ZonMw, The Netherlands, Organisation for Health Research and Development, and grant 2010T073 from the Dutch Heart Association to GB Biessels. Funding Information: YD Reijmer receives funding from Alzheimer Nederland and ZonMw/Memorabel (grant # 733050503) and a Young Talent Fellowship from the Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Center Utrecht. Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Ferro, Heinen, de Brito Robalo, Kuijf, Biessels and Reijmer.
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