神经心理学
动脉硬化
认知
执行职能
心脏病学
基底神经节
内科学
心理学
医学
神经科学
中枢神经系统
血压
作者
Corey W. Bown,Omair A. Khan,Dandan Liu,Samuel Remedios,Kimberly R. Pechman,James G. Terry,Sangeeta Nair,L. Taylor Davis,Bennett A. Landman,Katherine A. Gifford,Timothy J. Hohman,John Jeffrey Carr,Angela L. Jefferson
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2022.10.014
摘要
Enlarged perivascular spaces (ePVS) are difficult to quantify, and their etiologies and consequences are poorly understood. Vanderbilt Memory and Aging Project participants (n = 327, 73 ± 7 years) completed 3T brain MRI to quantify ePVS volume and count, longitudinal neuropsychological assessment, and cardiac MRI to quantify aortic stiffness. Linear regressions related (1) PWV to ePVS burden and (2) ePVS burden to cross-sectional and longitudinal neuropsychological performance adjusting for key demographic and medical factors. Higher aortic stiffness related to greater basal ganglia ePVS volume (β = 7.0×10-5, p = 0.04). Higher baseline ePVS volume was associated with worse baseline information processing (β = -974, p = 0.003), executive function (β = -81.9, p < 0.001), and visuospatial performances (β = -192, p = 0.02) and worse longitudinal language (β = -54.9, p = 0.05), information processing (β = -147, p = 0.03), executive function (β = -10.9, p = 0.03), and episodic memory performances (β = -10.6, p = 0.02). Results were similar for ePVS count. Greater arterial stiffness relates to worse basal ganglia ePVS burden, suggesting cardiovascular aging as an etiology. ePVS burden is associated with adverse cognitive trajectory, emphasizing the clinical relevance of ePVS.
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