Glazer Hilary, Dong Chuanhui, Yoshita Mitsuhiro, Rundek Tatjana, Elkind Mitchell S V, Sacco Ralph L, DeCarli Charles, Stern Yaakov, Wright Clinton B
From the Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Institute (H.G., C. Dong, T.R., R.L.S., C.B.W.), Departments of Neurology (H.G., C. Dong, T.R., R.L.S., C.B.W.) and Public Health Sciences (R.L.S., C.B.W.), Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, and the Neuroscience Program (C.B.W.), University of Miami, FL; Department of Neurology (M.Y.), Hokuriku National Hospital, Japan; Department of Neurology, College of Physicians and Surgeons (M.S.V.E., Y.S.), and Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health (M.S.V.E.), Columbia University, New York, NY; and Department of Neurology and Center for Neuroscience (C. DeCarli), University of California at Davis, Sacramento.
Neurology. 2015 Jun 9;84(23):2362-7. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000001657. Epub 2015 May 22.
Memory has been examined in subjects with imaging markers of cerebrovascular disease, but learning has been less well studied. We examined the relationship among subclinical cerebrovascular disease, cerebral volumes, and verbal learning in an ethnically and racially diverse community sample.
A clinically stroke-free subset of Northern Manhattan Study participants underwent cognitive testing and brain MRI with quantification of white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) and total cerebral volume (TCV) using semiautomated segmentation. We used generalized linear regression and mixed models to examine the association between imaging findings and verbal learning.
There were 1,272 participants (61% women, mean age 70 ± 9 years). Participants with greater WMHV and smaller TCV remembered fewer total words on a list-learning task (β = -0.83 per SD change in WMHV, 95% confidence interval [CI] = -1.22 to -0.45, p < 0.0001; and β = 0.48 per SD change in TCV, 95% CI = 0.05 to 0.90, p = 0.03, respectively). Subclinical brain infarction (SBI) was not associated with total words learned (β = -0.04, 95% CI = -1.08 to 1.00, p = 0.94). Those with greater WMHV had increased odds of a flatter learning slope. After excluding participants with SBI, the association between total words learned and WMHV remained significant. All measurements were adjusted for age, education, race/ethnicity, medical insurance status, and the presence of SBI.
White matter hyperintensities, a marker of cerebral small vessel disease, may have an impact on learning slope. This suggests that verbal learning performance can be incorporated into neuropsychological measures for vascular cognitive impairment and that cerebrovascular disease discovered on imaging affects the ability to learn new information.
已对患有脑血管疾病影像学标志物的受试者的记忆进行了研究,但对学习的研究较少。我们在一个种族和民族多样化的社区样本中研究了亚临床脑血管疾病、脑容量与言语学习之间的关系。
北曼哈顿研究参与者中无临床中风的一个子集接受了认知测试和脑部磁共振成像,使用半自动分割技术对白质高信号体积(WMHV)和总脑容量(TCV)进行量化。我们使用广义线性回归和混合模型来研究影像学结果与言语学习之间的关联。
共有1272名参与者(61%为女性,平均年龄70±9岁)。在列表学习任务中,WMHV较高且TCV较小的参与者记住的总单词数较少(WMHV每标准差变化的β值=-0.83,95%置信区间[CI]=-1.22至-0.45,p<0.0001;TCV每标准差变化的β值=0.48,95%CI=0.05至0.90,p=0.03)。亚临床脑梗死(SBI)与所学总单词数无关(β=-0.04,95%CI=-1.08至1.00,p=0.94)。WMHV较高的参与者学习斜率更平缓的几率增加。排除患有SBI的参与者后,所学总单词数与WMHV之间的关联仍然显著。所有测量均针对年龄、教育程度、种族/民族、医疗保险状况和SBI的存在进行了调整。
白质高信号是脑小血管疾病的一个标志物,可能对学习斜率有影响。这表明言语学习表现可纳入血管性认知障碍的神经心理学测量中,并且影像学上发现的脑血管疾病会影响学习新信息的能力。