Back to Search Start Over

Increased cerebral blood flow is associated with higher baseline amyloid burden in a cognitively unimpaired population

Authors :
Padrela, B. E.
Lorenzini, L.
Collij, L. E.
Tomassen, J.
Bader, I.
Shekari, M.
Berckel, B. N. M.
Visser, P. J.
Barkhof, F.
(0000-0002-3201-6002) Petr, J.
Mutsaerts, H.-J.
Padrela, B. E.
Lorenzini, L.
Collij, L. E.
Tomassen, J.
Bader, I.
Shekari, M.
Berckel, B. N. M.
Visser, P. J.
Barkhof, F.
(0000-0002-3201-6002) Petr, J.
Mutsaerts, H.-J.
Source :
Alzheimer's Association International Conference, 16.07.2023, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Decreased cerebral blood flow (CBF) and deterioration of blood-brain barrier (BBB) are suggested to be precursor conditions of cognitive impairment. Using a novel multi-echo-time arterial spin labelling (ASL) protocol, we examined the time of exchange (Tex) of water across the BBB as a measurement of BBB permeability. We further examined the association of cardiovascular risk factors with Tex in an ongoing cohort study. Method: Data (n=29, mean age: 55.9±6.1years, 69% women) were drawn from Neurological biomarkers of Blood, MRI and Cognition (NEURO-BMC) study performed at National University of Singapore. NEURO-BMC is an ongoing prospective cohort study (age: 45-65 years) on brain changes in a subclinical phase of cognitive impairment. A multi-echo, Hadamard-encoded multi-post-labelling-delay pseudo-continuous ASL (PCASL) protocol was used on a 3T scanner. ExploreASL was used with a modified version of FSL FABBER(4) to quantify cerebral blood flow (CBF), arterial transit time (ATT), and Tex. ASL-extracted parameters were compared with cardiovascular risk parameters such as blood pressure (BP), BMI and smoking status. Result: High systolic and diastolic BP were associated with significantly reduced Tex (Fig 1). Additionally, higher systolic and diastolic BP showed a trend of increased ATT and reduced CBF, though the associations were not statistically significant (Table 1). High BMI had a significant association with increased ATT and reduced CBF. However, no trend was observed between BMI and Tex. Participants who ever smoked were observed to have a reduced Tex and CBF and increased ATT, but statistical significance was only found for CBF (Fig 1). Conclusion: In this pilot study, we showed that BBB-ASL-derived parameters - ATT, CBF, and Tex - were associated with BP, BMI, and smoking status. While the sample size for this preliminary analysis was too small to make a definitive conclusion as not all associations were statistically significant, all studied

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Alzheimer's Association International Conference, 16.07.2023, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1415615586
Document Type :
Electronic Resource