Silent Brain Infarction on Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Neurological Abnormalities in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Author:

Price Thomas R.1,Manolio Teri A.1,Kronmal Richard A.1,Kittner Steven J.1,Yue Nancy C.1,Robbins John1,Anton-Culver Hoda1,O’Leary Daniel H.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Neurology, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore (T.R.P., S.J.K.); Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md (T.A.M.); Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington, Seattle (R.A.K.); Department of Neuroradiology, Johns Hopkins University Hospital, Baltimore, Md (N.C.Y.); Department of Medicine, University of California at Davis, Sacramento (J.R.); Epidemiology Division, University of...

Abstract

Background and Purpose Infarctlike lesions are frequently detected in symptomatic and asymptomatic older persons undergoing cerebral MRI, but their significance in older adults has not been examined. We determined the prevalence of MRI infarcts in a population-based sample of men and women aged ≥65 years and related these findings to demographic, cognitive, and neurological status. Methods MRI scanning was performed in 3660 Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) participants after brief neurological examinations and tests of cognitive function. MRIs were read centrally for the presence of an infarct ≥3 mm in diameter or smaller infarctlike lesions. Results MRI infarcts were detected in 1131 of 3647 participants with readable infarct information (31%) and in 961 of the subgroup of 3397 participants (28%) without known prior stroke (“silent” MRI infarcts). Smaller infarctlike lesions were found in 196 of 2516 participants who had no MRI infarcts ≥3 mm. MRI infarcts were more common in participants who were older, had prior stroke, impaired cognition, visual field deficits, slowed repetitive finger tapping (all P <.0001), weakness on toe and heel walking, and history of memory loss, coma, or migraine headaches. Multivariate analysis in those without prior stroke showed strong associations of silent MRI infarcts with older age, history of migraines, lower digit symbol scores, and more abnormalities on neurological examination. Conclusions MRI evidence of brain infarction is common in older men and women without a clinical history of stroke. Their strong associations with impaired cognition and neurological deficits suggest that they are neither silent nor innocuous.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

Reference34 articles.

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2. Silent stroke in the NINCDS Stroke Data Bank

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