학술논문

Cortical superficial siderosis in the general population: The Framingham Heart and Rotterdam studies
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Stroke. 16(7)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Neurosciences
Dementia
Clinical Research
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Aging
Stroke
Brain Disorders
Neurological
Aged
Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
Cerebral Hemorrhage
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Siderosis
Brain microbleeds
cerebral amyloid angiopathy
cerebral hemorrhage
community
cortical superficial siderosis
stroke facilities
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Clinical sciences
Allied health and rehabilitation science
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to characterize cortical superficial siderosis, its determinants and sequel, in community-dwelling older adults.MethodsThe sample consisted of Framingham (n = 1724; 2000-2009) and Rotterdam (n = 4325; 2005-2013) study participants who underwent brain MRI. In pooled individual-level analysis, we compared baseline characteristics in patients with cortical superficial siderosis to two reference groups: (i) persons without hemorrhagic MRI markers of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (no cortical superficial siderosis and no microbleeds) and (ii) those with presumed cerebral amyloid angiopathy based on the presence of strictly lobar microbleeds but without cortical superficial siderosis.ResultsAmong a total of 6049 participants, 4846 did not have any microbleeds or cortical superficial siderosis (80%), 401 had deep/mixed microbleeds (6.6%), 776 had strictly lobar microbleeds without cortical superficial siderosis (12.8%) and 26 had cortical superficial siderosis with/without microbleeds (0.43%). In comparison to participants without microbleeds or cortical superficial siderosis and to those with strictly lobar microbleeds but without cortical superficial siderosis, participants with cortical superficial siderosis were older (OR 1.09 per year, 95% CI 1.05, 1.14; p 999.99; p = 0.006). During a mean follow-up of 5.6 years, 42.4% participants with cortical superficial siderosis had a stroke (five intracerebral hemorrhage, two ischemic strokes and four undetermined strokes), 19.2% had transient neurological deficits and 3.8% developed incident dementia.ConclusionOur study adds supporting evidence to the association between cortical superficial siderosis and cerebral amyloid angiopathy within the general population. Community-dwelling persons with cortical superficial siderosis may be at high risk for intracerebral hemorrhage and future neurological events.