Higher white matter hyperintensity lesion load is associated with reduced long-range functional connectivity

Author:

Quandt Fanny1ORCID,Fischer Felix1,Schröder Julian1,Heinze Marlene1,Lettow Iris1,Frey Benedikt M1,Kessner Simon S1ORCID,Schulz Maximilian1,Higgen Focko L1,Cheng Bastian1,Gerloff Christian1,Thomalla Götz1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Cerebral small vessel disease is a common disease in the older population and is recognized as a major risk factor for cognitive decline and stroke. Small vessel disease is considered a global brain disease impacting the integrity of neuronal networks resulting in disturbances of structural and functional connectivity. A core feature of cerebral small vessel disease commonly present on neuroimaging is white matter hyperintensities. We studied high-resolution resting-state EEG, leveraging source reconstruction methods, in 35 participants with varying degree of white matter hyperintensities without clinically evident cognitive impairment in an observational study. In patients with increasing white matter lesion load, global theta power was increased independently of age. Whole-brain functional connectivity revealed a disrupted network confined to the alpha band in participants with higher white matter hyperintensities lesion load. The decrease of functional connectivity was evident in long-range connections, mostly originating or terminating in the frontal lobe. Cognitive testing revealed no global cognitive impairment; however, some participants revealed deficits of executive functions that were related to larger white matter hyperintensities lesion load. In summary, participants without clinical signs of mild cognitive impairment or dementia showed oscillatory changes that were significantly related to white matter lesion load. Hence, oscillatory neuronal network changes due to white matter lesions might act as biomarker prior to clinically relevant behavioural impairment.

Funder

German Research Foundation

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG

Sonderforschungsbereich

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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