Brickman Adam M, Muraskin Jordan, Zimmerman Molly E
Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer's Disease and the Aging Brain, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Dialogues Clin Neurosci. 2009;11(2):181-90. doi: 10.31887/DCNS.2009.11.2/ambrickman.
The targeted brain dysfunction that accompanies aging can have a devastating effect on cognitive and intellectual abilities. A significant proportion of older adults experience precipitous cognitive decline that negatively impacts functional activities. Such individuals meet clinical diagnostic criteria for dementia, which is commonly attributed to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Structural neuroimaging, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), has contributed significantly to our understanding of the morphological and pathology-related changes that may underlie normal and disease-associated cognitive change in aging. White matter hyperintensities (WMH), which are distributed patches of increased hyperintense signal on T2-weighted MRI, are among the most common structural neuroimaging findings in older adults. In recent years, WMH have emerged as robust radiological correlates of cognitive decline. Studies suggest that WMH distributed in anterior brain regions are related to decline in executive abilities that is typical of normal aging, whereas WMH distributed in more posterior brain regions are common in AD. Although epidemiological, observational, and pathological studies suggest that WMH may be ischemic in origin and caused by consistent or variable hypoperfusion, there is emerging evidence that they may also reflect vascular deposition of beta-amyloid, particularly when they are distributed in posterior areas and are present in patients with AD. Findings from the literature highlight the potential contribution of small-vessel cerebrovascular disease to the pathogenesis of AD, and suggest a mechanistic interaction, but future longitudinal studies using multiple imaging modalities are required to fully understand the complex role of WMH in AD.
伴随衰老出现的靶向性脑功能障碍会对认知和智力能力产生毁灭性影响。相当一部分老年人经历急剧的认知衰退,这对功能活动产生负面影响。这些个体符合痴呆症的临床诊断标准,而痴呆症通常归因于阿尔茨海默病(AD)。包括磁共振成像(MRI)在内的结构神经影像学,极大地增进了我们对可能构成衰老过程中正常和疾病相关认知变化基础的形态学和病理学相关变化的理解。白质高信号(WMH)是T2加权MRI上分布的高强度信号增加的斑块,是老年人中最常见的结构神经影像学发现之一。近年来,WMH已成为认知衰退的有力影像学相关指标。研究表明,分布在前脑区域的WMH与正常衰老典型的执行能力下降有关,而分布在更后脑区域的WMH在AD中很常见。尽管流行病学、观察性和病理学研究表明WMH可能起源于缺血,由持续或可变的灌注不足引起,但新出现的证据表明它们也可能反映β-淀粉样蛋白的血管沉积,特别是当它们分布在后脑区域且存在于AD患者中时。文献中的研究结果突出了小血管脑血管疾病对AD发病机制的潜在贡献,并表明存在一种机制性相互作用,但需要未来使用多种成像方式的纵向研究来充分了解WMH在AD中的复杂作用。