Cerebral Microinfarcts Affect Brain Structural Network Topology In Cognitively Impaired Patients

JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM(2021)

引用 11|浏览33
暂无评分
摘要
Cerebral microinfarcts (CMIs), a novel cerebrovascular marker, are prevalent in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and associated with cognitive impairment. Nonetheless, the underlying mechanism of how CMIs influence cognition remains uncertain. We hypothesized that cortical-CMIs disrupted structural connectivity in the higher-order cognitive networks, leading to cognitive impairment. We analyzed diffusion-MRI data of 92 AD (26 with cortical-CMIs) and 110 cognitive impairment no dementia patients (CIND, 28 with cortical-CMIs). We compared structural network topology between groups with and without cortical-CMIs in AD/CIND, and tested whether structural connectivity mediated the association between cortical-CMIs and cognition. Cortical-CMIs correlated with impaired structural network topology (i.e. lower efficiency/degree centrality in the executive control/dorsal attention networks in CIND, and lower clustering coefficient in the default mode/dorsal attention networks in AD), which mediated the association of cortical-CMIs with visuoconstruction dysfunction. Our findings provide the first in vivo human evidence that cortical-CMIs impair cognition in elderly via disrupting structural connectivity.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Alzheimer's disease, cognitive impairment no dementia, cognitive impairment, cortical cerebral microinfarcts, structural network topology
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要