Background

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) lesions on MRI are common in patients with cognitive impairment. It has been suggested that cerebral hypoperfusion is involved in the etiology of these lesions.

Objective

The aim of the study was to determine the relationship between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and SVD burden in patients referred to a memory clinic with SVD on MRI.

Method

We included 132 memory clinic patients (mean age 73 ± 10, 56% male) with SVD on MRI. We excluded patients with large non-lacunar cortical infarcts. Global CBF (mL/min per 100 mL of brain tissue) was derived from 2-dimensional phase-contrast MRI focused on the internal carotid arteries and the basilar artery. SVD burden was defined as the sum of (each 1 point): white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) Fazekas 1 or more, lacunes, microbleeds (MBs), or enlarged perivascular spaces (PVS) presence, and each SVD feature separately. Linear regression analyses were performed to study the association between CBF and SVD burden, age- and sex-adjusted.

Results

Median SVD burden score was 2, 36.4% of patients had MBs, 35.6% lacunar infarcts, 48.4% intermediate to severe enlarged PVS, and 57.6% a WMH Fazekas score 2 or more. Median WMH volume was 21.4 mL (25% quartile: 9.6 mL, 75% quartile: 32.5 mL). Mean CBF ± SD was 44.0 ± 11.9 mL/min per 100 mL brain. There was no relation between CBF and overall SVD burden (CBF difference per burden score point [95% CI]: -0.5 [-2.4; 1.4] mL/min/100 mL brain, p = 0.9). CBF did also not differ according to presence or absence or an high burden of any of the individual SVD features. Moreover, there was no significant relation between WMH volume and CBF (CBF difference per ml increase in WMH [95% CI] -0.6 [-1.5; 0.3] mL/min/100 mL brain p = 0.2).

Conclusion

Global CBF was not related to overall SVD burden or with individual SVD features in this memory clinic cohort, indicating that in this setting these lesions were not primarily due to cerebral hypoperfusion.

© 2020 The Author(s) Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.

Overview publication

TitleCerebral Perfusion and the Burden of Small Vessel Disease in Patients Referred to a Memory Clinic.
DateJanuary 1st, 2020
Issue nameCerebrovascular diseases (Basel, Switzerland)
Issue numberv49.5:481-486
DOI10.1159/000510969
PubMed33075786
AuthorsOnkenhout L, Appelmans N, Kappelle LJ, Koek D, Exalto L, de Bresser J & Biessels GJ
KeywordsCerebral perfusion, Enlarged perivascular spaces, Lacunes, Microbleeds, Small vessel disease, White matter hyperintesities
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