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(Stroke. 2008;39:397.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Department of Psychiatry (C.L.C., J.H.K.), University of California, San Francisco Medical Center; the Department of Neurology (S.A.J.), Stroke Sciences Group, University of California, San Francisco Medical Center; the Department of Neurology (D.M., B.R.R.), University of California, Davis Medical Center; the Department of Radiology (N.S., M.W.W.), University of California, San Francisco Medical Center; and the VA Medical Center (H.C.C.), Department of Neurology Department of Neurology, University of Southern California. Current affiliation for C.L.C.: Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego.
Correspondence to Catherine L. Carey, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, 150 W. Washington, 2nd Floor San Diego, CA 92103. E-mail ccarey{at}ucsd.edu
Background and Purpose— The relationship between subcortical ischemic vascular disease (SIVD) and cognition in normal elderly is unclear, in part because of methodological inconsistencies across studies. To clarify this relationship, the current study investigated a well characterized cognitively normal elderly sample (
55 years) with quantitative MRI and psychometrically robust neuropsychological measures within a multivariate model. Converging evidence suggests that SIVD selectively impairs frontal-executive tasks by disrupting frontal-subcortical circuits. We therefore hypothesized that MRI markers of SIVD would be selectively associated with worse executive functioning.
Methods— We studied 94 participants who were cognitively and functionally normal. Volumetric measures of white matter signal hyperintensity (WMH), subcortical lacunes, hippocampal volume, and cortical gray matter were obtained to predict performance on composite measures of executive functioning and episodic memory.
Results— Hierarchical regression demonstrated that after controlling for demographic variables, MMSE, and total intracranial volume, the total number of subcortical lacunes was the only significant predictor, with a greater number of lacunes associated with poorer executive performance. Hippocampal volume best predicted episodic memory performance.
Conclusions— Results suggest that SIVD in the form of silent lacunes corresponds to poorer executive functioning even in otherwise normal elderly, which is consistent with the hypothesis that SIVD preferentially disrupts frontal-subcortical circuits. The clinical importance of these findings is highlighted by the fact that 33% of the normal elderly participants in this study had lacunar infarcts.
Key Words: cerebral lacunes cognition elderly magnetic resonance imaging
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