4.3 Article

Association between cortical thickness and distinct vascular cognitive impairment and dementia in patients with white matter lesions

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 7, Pages 1612-1620

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/EP089419

Keywords

cortical thickness; dementia; vascular cognitive impairment; white matter lesions

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB1307301, 2018YFC2002300, 2018YFC2002302, 2020YFC2004100]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91648207, 61673068, 81972144, 31872785, 81972148]
  3. Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals Clinical Medicine Development of Special Funding Support [ZYLX201836]

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This study found significant differences in cortical thickness in patients with different types of WMLs, with a correlation between cortical thickness and cognitive function. These findings have important implications for the future treatment of WMLs.
New Findings What is the central question of this study? White matter lesions (WMLs) are a brain disease characterized by altered brain structural and functional connectivity, but findings have shown an inconsistent pattern: are there distinct cortical thickness changes in patients with WMLs subtypes? What is the main finding and its importance? Patients with WMLs with non-dementia vascular cognitive impairment and WMLs with vascular dementia showed distinct pathophysiology in cortical thickness. These neural correlates of WMLs should be considered in future treatment. The effect of cortical thickness on white matter lesions (WMLs) in patients with distinct vascular cognitive impairments is relatively unknown. This study investigated the correlation between cortical thickness and vascular cognitive manifestations. WML patients and healthy controls from Beijing Tiantan Hospital between 2014 and 2018 were included. The patients were further divided into two subgroups, namely WMLs with non-dementia vascular cognitive impairment (WML-VCIND) and WMLs with vascular dementia (WML-VaD) according to the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scale and the Beijing version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). Changes in cortical thickness were calculated using FreeSurfer. Pearson's correlation analysis was performed to explore the relationship between cognitive manifestations and cortical thickness in WML patients. Forty-five WML patients and 23 healthy controls were recruited. The WML group exhibited significant difference in cortical thickness compared to the control group. Significantly decreased cortical thickness in the middle and superior frontal gyri, middle temporal gyrus, angular gyrus and insula was found in the WML-VaD versus WML-VCIND subgroup. Cortical thickness deficits of the left caudal middle frontal gyrus (r = 0.451, P = 0.002), left rostral middle frontal gyrus (r = 0.514, P < 0.001), left superior frontal gyrus (r = 0.410, P = 0.006), right middle temporal gyrus (r = 0.440, P = 0.003), right pars triangularis (r = 0.462, P = 0.002), right superior frontal gyrus (r = 0.434, P = 0.004) and right insula (r = 0.499, P = 0.001) were positively correlated with the MoCA score in WML patients. The specific pattern of cortical thickness deficits in the WML-VaD subgroup revealed the pathophysiology of WMLs, which should be considered in future treatment of WMLs.

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