Marshall Randolph S, Pavol Marykay A, Cheung Ying Kuen, Asllani Iris, Lazar Ronald M
Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, New York, USA,
Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
Cerebrovasc Dis Extra. 2020;10(1):21-27. doi: 10.1159/000506924. Epub 2020 Apr 14.
Low cerebral blood flow can affect cognition in patients with high-grade asymptomatic internal carotid artery stenosis. Current clinical algorithms use stroke risk to determine which patients should undergo revascularization without considering cognitive decline. Although correlations between low-flow and cognitive impairment have been reported, it is not known whether a threshold exists below which such a correlation expresses itself. Such information would be critical in treatment decisions about whether to intervene in patients with high-grade carotid artery stenosis who are at risk for cognitive decline.
To determine how reduced blood flow correlates with lower cognitive scores.
Patients with ≥80% unilateral internal carotid artery stenosis with no history of stroke were recruited from inpatient and outpatient practices at a single, large, comprehensive stroke center. Patients underwent bilateral insonation of middle cerebral arteries with standard 2-Hz probes over the temporal windows with transcranial Doppler. Cognitive assessments were performed by an experienced neuropsychologist using a cognitive battery comprising 14 standardized tests with normative samples grouped by age. Z-scores were generated for each test and averaged to obtain a composite Z-score for each patient. Multivariable linear regression examined associations between mean flow velocity (MFV) and composite Z-score, adjusting for age, education, and depression. The Davies test was used to determine if there was a breakpoint for a non-zero difference in slope of a segmented relationship over the range of composite Z-score values.
Forty-two patients with unilateral high-grade internal carotid artery stenosis without stroke were enrolled (26 males, age = 74 ± 9 years, education = 16 ± 3 years). Average composite Z-score was -0.31 SD below the age-specific normative mean (range -2.8 to +1.2 SD). In linear regression adjusted for age, education, and depression, MFV correlated with cognitive Z-score (β = 0.308, p = 0.043). A single breakpoint in the range of composite Z-scores was identified at 45 cm/s. For MFV <45 cm/s, Z-score decreased 0.05 SD per cm/s MFV (95% CI: 0.01-0.10). For MFV >45 cm/s, Z-score change was nonsignificant (95% CI: -0.07 to 0.05).
In high-grade, asymptomatic carotid artery stenosis, cognitive impairment correlated linearly with lower flow in the hemisphere fed by the occluded internal carotid artery, but only below a threshold of MFV = 45 cm/s. Identifying a hemodynamic threshold for cognitive decline using a simple, noninvasive method may influence revascularization decision-making in otherwise "asymptomatic" carotid disease.
脑血流量低会影响无症状性颈内动脉高度狭窄患者的认知功能。目前的临床算法使用中风风险来确定哪些患者应接受血运重建,而未考虑认知功能下降。虽然已有低血流量与认知障碍之间相关性的报道,但尚不清楚是否存在一个阈值,低于该阈值这种相关性才会表现出来。此类信息对于决定是否干预有认知功能下降风险的无症状性颈内动脉高度狭窄患者的治疗决策至关重要。
确定血流量减少与较低认知评分之间的相关性。
从一个大型综合性卒中中心的住院和门诊患者中招募单侧颈内动脉狭窄≥80%且无中风病史的患者。使用标准2赫兹探头经颞窗对大脑中动脉进行双侧超声探测,采用经颅多普勒技术。由经验丰富的神经心理学家使用一套认知测试组合进行认知评估,该测试组合包括14项标准化测试,其常模样本按年龄分组。为每项测试生成Z分数,并求平均值以获得每位患者的综合Z分数。多变量线性回归分析平均血流速度(MFV)与综合Z分数之间的关联,并对年龄、教育程度和抑郁情况进行校正。使用戴维斯检验确定在综合Z分数值范围内分段关系斜率的非零差异是否存在断点。
纳入42例无中风病史的单侧颈内动脉高度狭窄患者(26例男性,年龄 = 74±9岁,教育年限 = 16±3年)。平均综合Z分数比特定年龄的常模平均值低0.31个标准差(范围为 -2.8至 +1.2个标准差)。在对年龄、教育程度和抑郁情况进行校正的线性回归分析中,MFV与认知Z分数相关(β = 0.308,p = 0. 043)。在综合Z分数范围内确定了一个45厘米/秒的断点。当MFV<45厘米/秒时,Z分数每降低1厘米/秒,下降0.05个标准差(95%置信区间:0.01 - 0.10)。当MFV>45厘米/秒时,Z分数变化无统计学意义(95%置信区间:-0.07至0.05)。
在无症状性颈内动脉高度狭窄患者中,认知障碍与闭塞侧颈内动脉供血半球的低血流量呈线性相关,但仅在MFV = 45厘米/秒的阈值以下。使用简单的非侵入性方法确定认知功能下降的血流动力学阈值可能会影响在其他方面“无症状”的颈动脉疾病患者的血运重建决策。