Cerebral Small Vessel Disease, Hypertension, and Vascular Contributions to Cognitive Impairment and Dementia

Author:

Hainsworth Atticus H.12ORCID,Markus Hugh S.3ORCID,Schneider Julie A.4

Affiliation:

1. Molecular and Clinical Sciences Research Institute, St George’s University of London, United Kingdom (A.H.H.).

2. Department of Neurology, St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom (A.H.H.).

3. Stroke Research Group, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (H.S.M.).

4. Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center, Departments of Pathology and Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL (J.A.S.).

Abstract

Hypertension-associated cerebral small vessel disease is a common finding in older people. Strongly associated with age and hypertension, small vessel disease is found at autopsy in over 50% of people aged ≥65 years, with a spectrum of clinical manifestations. It is the main cause of lacunar stroke and a major source of vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia. The brain areas affected are subcortical and periventricular white matter and deep gray nuclei. Neuropathological sequelae are diffuse white matter lesions (seen as white matter hyperintensities on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging), small ischemic foci (lacunes or microinfarcts), and less commonly, subcortical microhemorrhages. The most common form of cerebral small vessel disease is concentric, fibrotic thickening of small penetrating arteries (up to 300 microns outer diameter) termed arteriolosclerosis. Less common forms are small artery atheroma and lipohyalinosis (the lesions described by C. Miller Fisher adjacent to lacunes). Other microvascular lesions that are not reviewed here include cerebral amyloid angiopathy and venous collagenosis. Here, we review the epidemiology, neuropathology, clinical management, genetics, preclinical models, and pathogenesis of hypertensive small vessel disease. Knowledge gaps include initiating factors, molecular pathogenesis, relationships between arterial pathology and tissue damage, possible reversibility, pharmacological targets, and molecular biomarkers. Progress is anticipated from multicell transcriptomic and proteomic profiling, novel experimental models and further target-finding and interventional clinical studies.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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