Edinburgh Research Archive

Nonfocal symptoms of cerebral small vessel disease

dc.contributor.advisor
Wardlaw, Joanna
dc.contributor.advisor
Doubal, Fergus
dc.contributor.author
Clancy, Úna
dc.contributor.sponsor
other
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dc.date.accessioned
2022-05-24T14:31:21Z
dc.date.available
2022-05-24T14:31:21Z
dc.date.issued
2022-05-24
dc.description.abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is highly prevalent in the general population, increases with advancing age, and is a common cause of stroke and dementia. SVD affects multiple clinical domains and manifests on neuroimaging primarily as white matter hyperintensities (WMH), subcortical infarcts, lacunes, perivascular spaces, and microbleeds. Apart from stroke and dementia, SVD was previously thought to be clinically ‘silent’ but it is becoming apparent from cross-sectional studies that SVD is accompanied by neuropsychiatric, cognitive, and gait symptoms that do not meet the current clinical lexicon for stroke or dementia. Identifying earlier clinical markers of brain damage is essential for identifying patients for SVD treatment trials. We aimed to track and characterise whether subtle nonfocal symptoms are longitudinally associated with SVD lesion progression on brain MRI. We conducted a literature review of all SVD clinical features and a systematic review and meta-analysis of SVD-associated neuropsychiatric and cognitive features. We recruited patients with recent non-disabling ischaemic stroke, performed diagnostic MRI, and questioned participants and informants about neuropsychiatric, cognitive and gait symptoms. We repeated MRI and subjective symptom assessments at 3-6 monthly intervals for 12 months, longitudinally assessing WMH volume change and incident infarcts. We also analysed combined functional and cognitive associations with SVD progression in a separate stroke population. Finally, we assessed neuropsychiatric symptom-lesion associations in cognitively impaired and older adult populations. In our systematic review and meta-analysis, we found small but important associations between SVD severity and apathy, fatigue, and delirium, but not with subjective memory complaints, while anxiety and other neuropsychiatric symptoms were inconclusive. In 203 patients followed up for one year after a stroke (55% lacunar/45% cortical), we found that incident infarcts occur in 20% of patients, are mostly subcortical, co-associate with depression and brain fog, and there were trends towards associations with fatigue, falls, unsteadiness, episodes of confusion, and informant-reported cognitive and functional decline. We identified that that worse baseline WMH are associated with falls, apathy and brain fog, worse six-month WMH with falls and unsteadiness, and worse 12-month WMH with a trend towards falls. We found that longitudinal WMH progression is associated with falls and brain fog, with trends towards associations with worsening informant-reported neuropsychiatric symptoms and subjective memory complaints. In 264 separate stroke patients, we identified that one-year, but not baseline, WMH volumes associate strongly with contemporaneous cognitive scores, and co-varying longitudinal worsening of cognition and function post-stroke is associated with increasing WMH volumes. We found that worsening neuropsychiatric symptoms are associated with WMH progression in a cognitively impaired population. We established that in an older population, apathy independently associates with longitudinal WMH progression, while depression, anxiety, and subjective memory complaints do not. Overall, these findings highlight the existence of a potential clinical syndrome for identifying future SVD progression in high-risk patients. SVD progression is dynamic and can progress rapidly. These results support a need to clarify the prevalence of the SVD syndrome in the general population and to develop clinical prediction models to guide whether treatments could be trialled in individuals who are at high risk for SVD progression.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38992
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2243
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Clancy U, Makin SD, McHutchison CA, Cvoro V, Chappell FM, Valdes Hernandez MDCV, Sakka E, Doubal F, Wardlaw JM. Impact of small vessel disease progression on long-term cognitive and functional changes after stroke. Neurology. 2022 Feb 7:10.1212/WNL.0000000000200005. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000200005.
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dc.relation.hasversion
Clancy U, Ramirez J, Chappell FM, Doubal FN, Wardlaw JM, Black SE. Neuropsychiatric symptoms as a sign of small vessel disease progression in cognitive impairment. Cerebral Circulation - Cognition and Behavior. 2022; 3:100041. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cccb.2022.100041
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dc.relation.hasversion
Clancy U, Gilmartin D, Jochems ACC, Knox L, Doubal FN, Wardlaw JM. Neuropsychiatric symptoms associated with cerebral small vessel disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis. The Lancet Psychiatry. 2021 Mar;8(3):225-236. DOI: 10.1016/s2215-0366(20)30431-4
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Clancy U, Garcia DJ, Stringer MS, Thrippleton MJ, Valdés-Hernández MC, Wiseman S, Hamilton OK, Chappell FM; Brown R, Blair GW, Hewins W, Sleight E, Ballerini L, Bastin ME, Muñoz Maniega, S; MacGillivray T, Hetherington K, Hamid C, Arteaga C, Morgan AG, Manning C, Backhouse E, Hamilton I, Job D, Marshall I, Doubal FN and Wardlaw JM. Rationale and design of a longitudinal study of cerebral small vessel diseases, clinical and imaging outcomes in patients presenting with mild ischaemic stroke: Mild Stroke Study 3. Eur Stroke J. 2021 Mar;6(1):81-88. doi: 10.1177/2396987320929617
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Clancy U, Appleton JP, Arteaga C, Doubal FN, Bath PM, Wardlaw JM. Clinical management of cerebral small vessel disease: a call for a holistic approach. Chin Med J (Engl). 2020 Oct 6;134(2):127-142. doi: 10.1097/CM9.0000000000001177
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dc.relation.hasversion
Zhang JF, Lim HF, Chappell FM, Clancy U, Wiseman S, Valdés-Hernández MC, Garcia DJ, Bastin ME, Doubal FN, Hewins W, Cox SR, Maniega SM, Thrippleton M, Stringer M, Jardine C, McIntyre D, Barclay G, Hamilton I, Kesseler L, Murphy M, Perri CD, Wu YC, Wardlaw JM. Relationship between inferior frontal sulcal hyperintensities on brain MRI, ageing and cerebral small vessel disease. Neurobiol Aging. 2021 Oct;106:130-138. doi: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2021.06.013
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dc.relation.hasversion
Manning C, Stringer M, Dickie B, Clancy U, Valdés Hernandez MC, Wiseman SJ, Garcia DJ, Sakka E, Backes WH, Ingrisch M, Chappell F, Doubal F, Buckley C, Parkes LM, Parker GJM, Marshall I, Wardlaw JM, Thrippleton MJ. Sources of systematic error in DCE-MRI estimation of low-level blood-brain barrier leakage. Magn Reson Med. 2021 Oct;86(4):1888-1903. doi: 10.1002/mrm.28833
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Jochems ACC, Blair GW, Stringer MS, Thrippleton MJ, Clancy U, Chappell FM, Brown R, Garcia DJ, Hamilton OKL, Morgan AG, Marshall I, Hetherington K, Wiseman S, MacGillivray T, Valdés Hernandez MC, Doubal FN, Wardlaw JM. Relationship Between Venules and Perivascular Spaces in Sporadic Small Vessel Diseases. Stroke. 2020;51(5):1503-1506. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.02916
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dc.subject
small vessel disease
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brain scans
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lack of motivation
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dc.subject
vascular dementia
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dc.subject
stroke
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dc.title
Nonfocal symptoms of cerebral small vessel disease
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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