Litcius/Paper detail

Pulsatility Index in the Basal Ganglia Arteries Increases with Age in Elderly with and without Cerebral Small Vessel Disease

V. Perosa, T. Arts, A. Assmann, H. Mattern, O. Speck, J. Oltmer, H.-J. Heinze, E. Düzel, S. Schreiber, J.J.M. Zwanenburg

2022American Journal of Neuroradiology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cerebral small vessel disease contributes to stroke and cognitive impairment and interacts with Alzheimer disease pathology. Because of the small dimensions of the affected vessels, in vivo characterization of blood flow properties is challenging but important to unravel the underlying mechanisms of the disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: = 28; no cerebral microbleeds). RESULTS: Older age was related to a greater pulsatility index, irrespective of cerebral small vessel disease. In hypertensive arteriopathy, there was an association between lower blood flow velocity of the basal ganglia and the presence of peri-basal ganglia WM hyperintensities. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that age might be the driving factor for altered cerebral small vessel hemodynamics. Furthermore, this study puts cerebral small vessel disease downstream pathologies in the basal ganglia region in relation to blood flow characteristics of the basal ganglia microvasculature.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBasal gangliaBasal (medicine)CardiologyPulsatility indexInternal medicineCerebral blood flowBlood vesselAnatomyCerebral arteriesVascular diseaseCentral nervous systemBlood flowDiseasePathologyCentral nervous system diseaseCirculatory systemDegenerative diseasePathophysiologyRisk factorAdvanced MRI Techniques and ApplicationsNeurological and metabolic disordersCerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalus