Publicación Oficial de la Sociedad Ecuatoriana de Neurología, de la Liga Ecuatoriana Contra la Epilepsia y de la Sociedad Iberoamericana de Enfermedad Cerebrovascular

hiperintensidades de sustancia blanca

 

White matter hyperintensities severity and progression are not related to earlobe crease presence. A cross-sectional and longitudinal prospective study in community-dwelling older adults. La severidad y progresión de hiperintensidades de la sustancia blanca no están relacionados con la presencia del pliegue del lóbulo de la oreja. Un estudio transversal y longitudinal prospectivo en una población de adultos mayores

Background: Earlobe crease (ELC) has been associated with coronary atherosclerosis. Recently, ELC has been associated with white matter hyperintensities (WMH) of presumed vascular origin. However, the results are heterogeneous among studies. We aimed to assess whether ELC is associated with WMH severity and progression in community-dwelling older adults.

Methods: Atahualpa Project Cohort participants received earlobe photographs and brain MRIs to assess the association between ELC and WMH severity, as well as the relationship between ELC and WMH progression using ordinal logistic and Poisson regression models, respectively.

Results: The cross-sectional component of the study included 359 individuals aged ≥60 years. ELC was present in 175 subjects. On MRI, 107 participants did not have WMH, 174 had mild, 56 had moderate, and 22 had severe WMH. A multivariate ordinal logistic regression model did not show a significant association between the main variables investigated (OR: 0.72; 95% C.I.: 0.48 – 1.06). The longitudinal component included 252 individuals, 126 of whom had ELC and 103 had WMH progression. A Poisson regression model showed no association between ELC and WMH progression (IRR: 1.02; 95% C.I.: 0.69 – 1.51).

Conclusions: ELC is not related to WMH severity and progression in the study population.

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Limited value of blood pressure levels in predicting white matter hyperintensities progression among community dwelling older adults living in a rural setting. Utilidad limitada de los niveles de presión arterial como predictor de progresión de hiperintensidades de sustancia blanca en adultos mayores que viven en un entorno rural

Introduction: This study aims to assess the impact of blood pressure (BP) on progression of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) of presumed vascular origin in community-dwelling older adults living in rural Ecuador.

Methods: Atahualpa residents aged ≥60 years receiving baseline and follow-up brain MRIs after a median of 6.5 years were included. Multilevel logistic regression models, which accounted for WMH severity at baseline, were fitted to assess the risk of WMH progression according to BP levels and other covariates.

Results: Analysis included 263 participants. WMH progression increased 3.45 times (95% C.I.: 1.94 – 4.96) among non-hypertensive individuals but 6.15 times (95% C.I.: 3.18 – 9.12) among those with arterial hypertension. However, overlapping of confidence intervals make such difference non-significant. Likewise, no differences in WMH progression were noticed when steady and pulsatile components of BP were used as independent variables.

Conclusions: High BP is not an independent predictor of WMH progression in the study population. 

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Función cognitiva en adultos mayores con y sin dedos de Dawson relacionados con enfermedad de pequeño vaso cerebral. Cognitive performance in older adults with and without Dawson’s fingers-related cerebral small vessel disease

Background/objective: Dawson’s fingers have been traditionally associated with multiple sclerosis. However, this imaging biomarker has also been linked to white matter hyperintensities related to cerebral small vessel disease. In the latter, Dawson’s fingers could represent damage of small venules in subjects with severe small vessel disease and could theoretically be associated with cognitive decline. In this study, we aimed to assess the association between Dawson’s fingers and cognitive performance in a population of older adults. 

Methods: Population-based study conducted in individuals aged 60 years or older, residing in three rural villages of coastal Ecuador (Atahualpa, El Tambo and Prosperidad). Of 712 older adults identified by means of a door-to-door survey, 590 underwent a brain MRI. Of them, 575 also had the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). We selected the 157 individuals with moderate-to-severe white matter hyperintensities to assess the presence of Dawson’s fingers. The independent association between Dawson’s fingers and cognitive performance (as the dependent variable) was assessed by means of a linear regression model, after adjusting for demographics, cardiovascular risk factors, and the other biomarkers of cerebral small vessel disease. 

Results: Of 157 individuals with moderate-to-severe White matter hyperintensities, 17 (11%) had Dawson’s fingers on MRI. The mean MoCA score in subjects with Dawson’s fingers was 14.5±6.4 points and that of those without this neuroimaging biomarker was 17.3±6.2 points. The association between Dawson’s fingers and the MoCA score was marginal in univariate models (p=0.082), but it completely vanished in a multivariate linear regression model adjusted for relevant covariates (β:-0.31; 95% C.I.: -3.23 – 2.60; p=0.833). A mediation model disclosed that 83.5% of the effect of Dawson’s finger on cognitive performance was mediated by age. 

Conclusion: Dawson’s fingers are not independently associated with cognitive performance in individuals with cerebral small vessel disease. Most of the effect of this association is mediated by age. 

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El Posicionamiento Elevado de Cabeza y Cuerpo Podrían Afectar la Autorregulación Cerebral Dinámica en Pacientes con Enfermedad Silente de Pequeño Vaso Cerebral. Protocolo y Definiciones Operacionales. Head-Up And Body Positioning Might Impair Dynamic Cerebral Autoregulation In Patients With Silent Cerebral Small Vessel Disease. Protocol And Operational Definitions.

Background: Cerebral autoregulation (CA) is the ability of intracranial vessels to maintain a constant cerebral blood flow (CBF) during changes of cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) related to fluctuations in blood pressure, postural changes or increased metabolic demands. It has been suggested that individuals with silent cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) may have impaired CA, but information is inconclusive. We describe the protocol of a study aimed to assess the association between white matter hyperintensities (WMH) of presumed vascular origin and poor dynamic CA, and to determine the effects of head-up and body positioning in patients with this condition. Methods: Using a case-control study design, we will assess the relationship between severity of WMH and dynamic CA, measured by continuous transcranial Doppler assessment of CBF velocities in the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) combined with beat-to-beat blood pressure monitoring. Dynamic CA will be analyzed by calculating the mean flow index as the ratio of median arterial pressure and mean flow velocities of the MCAs. Participants will be categorized as case-patients if the MRI shows moderate-to-severe WMH. For every case-patient, an age- and sex-matched healthy individual with no neuroimaging evidence of SVD will be selected as a control. Comment: This study will assess whether head-up and body positioning impairs dynamic CA in the setting of diffuse subcortical damage related to SVD, providing further evidence on the importance of CPP in maintaining the CBF. If positive, the study will provide evidence favoring the stop of aggressive hypertensive therapy or interventions promoting orthostatic hypotension to reduce the risk of further ischemic brain damage in these cases.

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