Sin Mo-Kyung, Cheng Yan, Roseman Jeffrey, Zamrini Edward, Ahmed Ali
College of Nursing, Seattle University, Seattle, USA.
Biomedical Informatics Center, School of Medicine & Health Sciences, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Int J Cerebrovasc Dis Stroke. 2024;7(1). doi: 10.29011/2688-8734.100171. Epub 2024 Jan 17.
Cerebral microinfarcts are common in older adults and are associated with cognitive impairment. Less is known about sex-related variation in the relationship between cerebral microinfarcts and dementia in older adults, the examination of which was the objective of this study. This case-control study was based on the 727 participants (419 women) in the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) autopsy data. Microinfarcts were ascertained by blinded board-certified neuropathologists, and dementia diagnoses were made by the ACT Consensus Diagnosis Conference per DSM-IV. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to estimate adjusted odds ratio (aOR) and 95% confidence interval (CI). Microinfarcts were present in 49% (356/727) of the participants, which was numerically higher in women: 51% (213/419) vs 46% (143/308). aOR (95% CI) for dementia associated with any microinfarct for female and male participants were 1.45 (0.91-2.30) and 1.24 (0.75-2.06), respectively (p for interaction, 0.34). Respective aORs (95%CIs) associated with ≥2 microinfarcts were 1.37 (0.79-2.36) and 1.53 (0.84-2.78), with interaction p, 0.84. Subcortical microinfarcts were present in 36% (138/381) and 23% (78/346) of patients with and without dementia (aOR, 1.65; 95% CI, 1.14-2.38). Respective aOR (95% CI) in female and male participants were 1.70 (1.03-2.82) and 1.59 (0.90-2.80), (p for interaction, 0.55). There was no association with cortical microinfarcts (aOR, 1.19; 95% CI, 0.83-1.69). These findings suggest that association between microinfarcts and dementia is primarily mediated by subcortical microinfarcts, but we found no evidence of sex-related variation. Future studies with greater power are needed to determine if the associations we found are replicable.
脑微梗死在老年人中很常见,且与认知障碍有关。关于老年人脑微梗死与痴呆症之间关系的性别差异,人们了解较少,本研究的目的就是对此进行调查。这项病例对照研究基于“成人思维变化”(ACT)尸检数据中的727名参与者(419名女性)。微梗死由具备资质的神经病理学家在不知情的情况下确定,痴呆症诊断由ACT共识诊断会议根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版做出。采用多变量逻辑回归模型来估计调整后的优势比(aOR)和95%置信区间(CI)。49%(356/727)的参与者存在微梗死,女性的这一比例在数值上更高:51%(213/419)对46%(143/308)。女性和男性参与者中与任何微梗死相关的痴呆症的aOR(95%CI)分别为1.45(0.91 - 2.30)和1.24(0.75 - 2.06)(交互作用p值为0.34)。与≥2个微梗死相关的各自aOR(95%CI)分别为1.37(0.79 - 2.36)和1.53(0.84 - 2.78),交互作用p值为0.84。有痴呆症和无痴呆症患者中分别有36%(138/381)和23%(78/346)存在皮质下微梗死(aOR,1.65;95%CI,1.14 - 2.38)。女性和男性参与者各自的aOR(95%CI)分别为1.70(1.03 - 2.82)和1.59(0.90 - 2.80)(交互作用p值为0.55)。与皮质微梗死无关联(aOR,1.19;95%CI,0.83 - 1.69)。这些发现表明,微梗死与痴呆症之间的关联主要由皮质下微梗死介导,但我们未发现性别差异的证据。需要开展更具效力的未来研究来确定我们所发现的关联是否可重复。