Association of cognitive function and hypoperfusion in Moyamoya disease patients without stroke

Author:

Shen Xu-Xuan12,Zhang Hou-Di2,Fu He-Guan12,Xu Jia-Li3ORCID,Zhang Hong-Tao4,Hou Lei5,Zou Zheng-Xing2,Li Bin2,Hao Fang-Bin6,Duan Lian16,Han Cong16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, The Fifth School of Clinical Medicine, Anhui Medical University, Beijing, China

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Fifth Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China

3. Department of Neurology, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China

4. Department of Radiology, Fifth Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China

5. Department of Neurology, First Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China

6. Department of Neurosurgery, First Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China

Abstract

The influence of hypoperfusion on cognition in patients with Moyamoya disease (MMD) is unclear. This study investigated cognitive function changes in MMD patients without stroke and illustrated the relationship between cognitive impairment and hypoperfusion. We prospectively performed a structured battery of seven neurocognitive tests on 115 adult MMD patients without stroke and 82 healthy controls. Hemodynamic assessment was performed using dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced MRI. The best subset regression (BSR) strategy was used to identify risk factors. Global cognition (MoCA), speed of information processing (TMT-A), executive function (TMT-B), visuospatial function (CDT), and verbal memory (CAVLT) were significantly poorer in MMD patients without stroke than in healthy controls. The TMT-B score significantly correlated with cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the bilateral lateral frontal lobes, centrum semiovale, and temporal lobes. The TMT-A and CAVLT scores significantly correlated with CBF in the left centrum semiovale (L-CSO) and temporal lobes. According to the BSR results, age, education, white matter lesions, and hypoperfusion of the L-CSO were risk factors for cognitive impairment. Hypoperfusion leads to multiple cognitive impairments in MMD patients without stroke. The perfusion of particular areas may help evaluate the cognitive function of MMD patients and guide therapeutic strategies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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