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A multi-center, prospective study on the progression rate of asymptomatic ventriculomegaly with features of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus on magnetic resonance imaging to idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus

Authors :
Madoka Nakajima
Nagato Kuriyama
Yoshinaga Kajimoto
Yoshio Kobayashi
Katsuhiro Endo
Satoshi Onozuka
Luna Kimihira
Takashi Saegusa
Hajime Kato
Takeo Kato
Toru Baba
Masahito Kobayashi
Teruo Kimura
Masashi Yamazaki
Yoshimi Takahashi
Shunsuke Sato
Hiroaki Kazui
Yusuke Tomogane
Hidenori Sato
Hiroji Miyake
Hisayuki Murai
Hajime Arai
Chifumi Iseki
Yasuaki Takeda
Mitsunori Matsumae
Masakazu Miyajima
Source :
Journal of the neurological sciences. 419
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Introduction Our previous community-based study demonstrated that some individuals with AVIM [asymptomatic ventriculomegaly with features of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)] progressed to iNPH in several years. In this hospital-based study, we investigated the progression rate from AVIM to iNPH and its possible predictors. Methods We conducted a prospective study of participants with AVIM from several medical institutions/hospitals in Japan. AVIM is defined as “asymptomatic ventriculomegaly with features of iNPH on MRI”; in the present study, asymptomatic was defined as “0 (no symptoms) or 1 (presence of only subjective, but not objective, symptoms) on the iNPH Grading Scale (iNPH-GS).” We also measured possible predicting factors for AVIM-to-iNPH progression, including age, sex, body weight, blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, history of mental disease/head injury/sinusitis/smoking/alcohol-intake, Evans index, and the presence of DESH (disproportionately enlarged subarachnoid-space hydrocephalus) findings on brain MRI, and analyzed these potential predictive values. Results In 2012, 93 participants with AVIM were registered and enrolled in the study. Of these, 52 participants were able to be tracked for three years (until 2015). Of the 52 participants, 27 (52%) developed iNPH during the follow-up period (11 definite, 6 probable, and 10 possible iNPH), whereas 25 participants remained asymptomatic in 2015. Among the possible predictive factors examined, the baseline scores of iNPH-GS predicted the AVIM-to-iNPH progression. Conclusions The multicenter prospective study demonstrated that the progression rate from AVIM to iNPH was ~17% per year, and the baseline scores of iNPH-GS predicted the AVIM-to-iNPH progression.

Details

ISSN :
18785883
Volume :
419
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the neurological sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....081cc1f176a6de3a26e25dd5570b3151