Free Neuropathology (Mar 2022)

Cerebrovascular disease lesions are additive and tied to vascular risk factors and cognitive impairment

  • John Robinson,
  • Hayley Richardson,
  • Sharon X Xie,
  • Brian Alfaro,
  • Nicholas Loh,
  • Virginia M-Y Lee,
  • Edward B Lee,
  • John Q Trojanowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17879/freeneuropathology-2022-3792
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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Cerebrovascular lesions are prevalent in late life and frequently co-occur but the relationship to cognitive impairment is complicated by the lack of consensus around which lesions represent hallmark pathologies for vascular impairment, particularly in the presence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We developed an easily applicable model of cerebrovascular disease (CVD), defined as the presence of two or more lesions: moderate to severe cerebral amyloid angiopathy, moderate to severe arteriolosclerosis, infarcts (large, lacunar, or micro), and/or hemorrhages. AD was defined as intermediate or high AD neuropathologic change. The contribution of vascular risk factors such as atherosclerosis and/or a health history of heart disease, hyperlipidemia, stroke events, diabetes, or hypertension was also assessed. Logistic regression analysis reported the association of CVD with increasing age, vascular risk factors, AD, and cognitive impairment in this study of 1,485 autopsied individuals. Cerebrovascular lesions were present in 48% and 16% had CVD. Increasing age associated with all lesions (p0.61). From this, we conclude that a simple, additive model of CVD is 1) age and AD-associated, 2) is associated with vascular risk factors, and 3) clinically correlates with cognitive decline independent of AD.

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