Cerebral blood flow and intracranial pulsatility in cerebral small vessel disease
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Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is associated with increased risks of stroke and
dementia, however the mechanisms remain unclear. Low cerebral blood flow (CBF)
has long been suggested and accepted, but clinical evidence is conflicting. On the
other hand, growing evidence suggests that increased intracranial pulsatility due to
vascular stiffening might be an alternative mechanism. Pulse-gated phase-contrast
MRI is an imaging technique that allows measuring of CBF contemporaneously with
pulsatility in multiple vessels and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) spaces. The overall aim
of this thesis was to provide an overview of existing clinical evidence on both
hypotheses, to test the reproducibility of CBF and pulsatility measures in phase-contrast
MRI, and to explore the relationship between CBF and intracranial
pulsatility and SVD features in a group of patients with minor stroke and SVD
changes on brain imaging.
I first systematically reviewed and meta-analysed clinical studies that have assessed
CBF or intracranial pulsatility in SVD patients. There were 38 studies (n=4006) on
CBF and 27 (n=3356) on intracranial pulsatility. Most were cross-sectional, and
longitudinal studies were scarce. There were large heterogeneities in patient
characteristics and indices used particularly for measuring and calculating pulsatility.
Methods to reduce bias such as blinding and the expertise of structural image readers
were generally poorly reported, and many studies did not account for the impact of
confounding factors (e.g. age, vascular risk factors and disease severity) on CBF or
pulsatility. Evidence for falling CBF predating SVD was not supported by
longitudinal studies; high pulsatility in one large artery such as internal carotid
arteries (ICA) or middle cerebral arteries might be related to SVD, but studies that
measured arteries, veins and CSF in the same patients were very limited and the
reliability of some pulsatility measures, especially in CSF, needs to be tested.
In order to test the reproducibility of the CBF and intracranial pulsatility measures, I
repeated 2D phase-contrast MRI scans of vessels and CSF on healthy volunteers
during two visits. I also compared the ICA pulsatility index derived from the MRI
flow waveform to that from the Doppler ultrasound velocity waveform in patients
with minor stroke and SVD features. In 10 heathy volunteers (age 35.2±9.78 years),
the reproducibility of CBF and vascular pulsatility indices was good, with within-subject
coefficients of variability (CV) less than 10%; whereas CSF flow and
pulsatility measures were generally less reproducible (CV>20%). In 56 patients (age
67.8±8.27 years), the ICA pulsatility indices in Doppler ultrasound and MRI were
acceptably well-correlated (r=0.5, p<0.001) considering the differences in the two
techniques.
We carried out a cross-sectional study aiming to recruit 60 patients with minor stroke
and SVD features. We measured CBF and intracranial pulsatility using phase-contrast
MRI, as well as aortic augmentation index (AIx) using a SphygmoCor
device. I first investigated the relationship between intracranial measures, and
systemic blood pressure or aortic AIx, and then focused on how the intracranial
haemodynamic measures related to two main SVD features (white matter
hyperintensities (WMH) and perivascular spaces (PVS)). We obtained usable data
from 56/60 patients (age 67.8±8.27 years), reflecting a range of SVD burdens. After
the adjustment for age, gender, and history of hypertension, higher pulsatility in the
venous sinuses was associated with lower diastolic blood pressure and lower mean
arterial pressure (e.g. diastolic blood pressure on straight sinus pulsatility index (PI):
β=-0.005, P=0.029), but not with aortic AIx. Higher aortic AIx was associated with
low ICA PI (β=-0.011, P=0.040). Increased pulsatility in the venous sinuses, not low
CBF, was associated with greater WMH volume (e.g. superior sagittal sinus PI:
β=1.29, P=0.005) and more basal ganglia PVS (e.g. odds ratio=1.379 per 0.1 increase
in superior sagittal sinus PI) after the adjustment for age, gender and blood pressure.
The thesis is the first to summarise the literature on CBF and intracranial pulsatility
in SVD patients, addressed the major limitations of current clinical studies of SVD,
and also assessed CBF and intracranial pulsatility contemporaneously in well-characterised
patients with SVD features. The overall results of the thesis challenge
the traditional hypothesis of the cause and effect between low CBF and SVD, and
suggest that increased cerebrovascular pulsatility, which might be due to intrinsic
cerebral small vessel pathologies rather than just aortic stiffness, is important for
SVD. More importantly, this pilot study also provides a reliable methodology for
measuring intracranial pulsatility using phase-contrast MRI for future longitudinal or
larger multicentre studies, and shows that intracranial pulsatility could be used as a
secondary outcome in clinical trials of SVD. However, future research is required to
elucidate the implication of venous pulsatility and to fully explore the passage of
pulse wave transmission in the brain. Overall, this thesis advances knowledge and
suggest potential targets for future SVD studies in terms of mechanisms, prevention
and treatment.
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