1. Vascular burden and cognition: Mediating roles of neurodegeneration and amyloid PET
- Author
-
Julie, Ottoy, Miracle, Ozzoude, Katherine, Zukotynski, Sabrina, Adamo, Christopher, Scott, Vincent, Gaudet, Joel, Ramirez, Walter, Swardfager, Hugo, Cogo-Moreira, Benjamin, Lam, Aparna, Bhan, Parisa, Mojiri, Min Su, Kang, Jennifer S, Rabin, Alex, Kiss, Stephen, Strother, Christian, Bocti, Michael, Borrie, Howard, Chertkow, Richard, Frayne, Robin, Hsiung, Robert Jr, Laforce, Michael D, Noseworthy, Frank S, Prato, Demetrios J, Sahlas, Eric E, Smith, Phillip H, Kuo, Vesna, Sossi, Alexander, Thiel, Jean-Paul, Soucy, Jean-Claude, Tardif, Sandra E, Black, and Maged, Goubran
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Epidemiology ,Health Policy ,mental disorders ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Abstract
INTRODUCTIONIt remains unclear to which extent vascular burden promotes neurodegeneration and cognitive dysfunction in a cohort spanning low-to-severe small vessel disease (SVD) and amyloid-beta pathology.METHODSIn 120 subjects, we investigated 1) whether vascular burden, quantified as total or lobar white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes, is associated with different cognitive domains; and 2) whether the total WMH effect on cognition is mediated by amyloid (18F-AV45-PET), glucose metabolism (18F-FDG-PET), and/or cortical atrophy.RESULTSIncreased total WMH volume was associated with poorer performance in all cognitive domains tested, with the strongest effects observed for semantic fluency. These relationships were mediated mainly through cortical atrophy, particularly in the temporal lobe, and to a lesser extent through amyloid and metabolism. WMH volumes differentially impacted cognition depending on lobar location and amyloid status.DISCUSSIONOur study suggests mainly an amyloid-independent pathway in which vascular burden affects cognitive impairment through temporal lobe atrophy.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF