학술논문

The relationship of cerebral microbleeds to cognition and incident dementia in non-demented older individuals
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Brain Imaging and Behavior. 13(3):750-761
Subject
Cerebral microbleeds
cognitive function
dementia
old age
MRI
SWI
Language
English
ISSN
1931-7557
1931-7565
Abstract
Cerebral microbleeds (CMB), suspected markers of hemorrhage-prone microangiopathy, are common in patients with cerebrovascular disease and in those with cognitive impairment. Their longitudinal relationship with cognitive decline and incident dementia in non-demented community-dwelling older individuals has been insufficiently examined. 302 adults aged 70–90 participating in the population-based Sydney Memory and Ageing Study underwent a susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) MRI sequence. The relationship of CMB with performance on neuropsychological tests was examined both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, over a mean of 4 years. The association with cases of incident dementia during this period was also examined. The prevalence of CMB was 20%. In cross-sectional analysis, after adjusting for demographics and vascular risk factors, there was a significant association between the presence of CMB and poorer executive function. CMB were not associated with global cognition or other cognitive domains. On longitudinal analysis, after adjusting for demographics and vascular risk factors, there was a greater decline in visuospatial ability in those with CMB compared to those without. The presence of CMB was not associated with increased progression to dementia. CMB are associated with impairments in specific cognitive domains: executive function and decline in visuospatial ability, independent of other markers of CVD including white matter hyperintensities. This suggests a direct contribution of CMB to cognitive impairment although no significant difference in incident dementia rates was observed.