4.6 Article

Microvessel stenosis, enlarged perivascular spaces, and fibrinogen deposition are associated with ischemic periventricular white matter hyperintensities

Journal

BRAIN PATHOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bpa.13017

Keywords

fibrinogen; periventricular infarct; small vessel disease; stenosis; white matter disease; white matter hyperintensity

Funding

  1. Canada First Research Excellence Fund
  2. Canadian Institute for Health Research
  3. Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration and Aging
  4. CIHR doctoral scholarship

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pvWMH are neuroimaging abnormalities associated with factors such as age, neurodegenerative diseases, and cerebrovascular risk factors. The pathological causes of pvWMH are heterogeneous and may involve factors like small vessel disease, ependymal loss, blood-brain barrier dysfunction, and microgliosis. This study found associations between microvessel stenosis, perivascular spaces, and fibrinogen immunohistochemistry with and without periventricular infarction in pvWMH.
Periventricular white matter hyperintensities (pvWMH) are neuroimaging abnormalities surrounding the lateral ventricles that are apparent on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). They are associated with age, neurodegenerative disease, and cerebrovascular risk factors. While pvWMH ultimately represent a loss of white matter structural integrity, the pathological causes are heterogeneous in nature, and currently, cannot be distinguished using neuroimaging alone. pvWMH could occur because of a combination of small vessel disease (SVD), ependymal loss, blood-brain barrier dysfunction, and microgliosis. In this study we aimed to characterize microvascular stenosis, fibrinogen extravasation, and microgliosis within pvWMH with and without imaging evidence of periventricular infarction. Using postmortem neuroimaging of human brains (n = 20), we identified pvWMH with and without periventricular infarcts (PVI). We performed histological analysis of microvessel stenosis, perivascular spaces, microgliosis, and immunohistochemistry against fibrinogen as a measure of serum protein extravasation. Herein, we report distinctions between pvWMH with and without periventricular infarcts based on associations with microvessel stenosis, enlarged perivascular spaces, and fibrinogen IHC. Microvessel stenosis was significantly associated with PVI and with cellular deposition of fibrinogen in the white matter. The presence of fibrinogen was associated with PVI and increased number of microglia. These findings suggest that neuroimaging-based detection of infarction within pvWMH may help distinguish more severe lesions, associated with underlying microvascular disease and BBB dysfunction, from milder pvWMH that are a highly frequent finding on MRI.

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