Pathogenesis of cerebral microbleeds: In vivo imaging of amyloid and subcortical ischemic small vessel disease in 226 individuals with cognitive impairment

Jae‐Hyun Park(Samsung Medical Center), Sang Won Seo(Samsung Medical Center), Changsoo Kim(Yonsei University), Geon Ha Kim(Samsung Medical Center), Hyun Jin Noh(Samsung Medical Center), Sung Tae Kim(Samsung Medical Center), Kichang Kwak(Hanyang University), Uicheul Yoon(Daegu Catholic University), Jong Min Lee(Ulsan College), Jong Weon Lee(Ulsan College), Ji Soo Shin(Samsung Medical Center), Chi Hun Kim(Yonsei University), Young Noh(Samsung Medical Center), Hanna Cho(Samsung Medical Center), Hee‐Jin Kim(Samsung Medical Center), Cindy W. Yoon(Samsung Medical Center), Seung Jun Oh(Ulsan College), Jae Seung Kim(Ulsan College), Yearn Seong Choe(Samsung Medical Center), Kyung‐Han Lee(Samsung Medical Center), Jae‐Hong Lee(Ulsan College), Michael Ewers(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Michael W. Weiner(San Francisco VA Medical Center), David J. Werring(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Duk L. Na(Samsung Medical Center)
Annals of Neurology
January 29, 2013
Cited by 159Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) are a neuroimaging marker of small vessel disease (SVD) with relevance for understanding disease mechanisms in cerebrovascular disease, cognitive impairment, and normal aging. It is hypothesized that lobar CMBs are due to cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and deep CMBs are due to subcortical ischemic SVD. We tested this hypothesis using structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) markers of subcortical SVD and in vivo imaging of amyloid in patients with cognitive impairment. METHODS: We included 226 patients: 89 with Alzheimer disease-related cognitive impairment (ADCI) and 137 with subcortical vascular cognitive impairment (SVCI). All subjects underwent amyloid imaging with [(11) C] Pittsburgh compound B (PiB) positron emission tomography, and MRI to detect CMBs and markers of subcortical SVD, including the volume of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and the number of lacunes. RESULTS: Parietal and occipital lobar CMBs counts were higher in PiB(+) ADCI with moderate WMH than PiB(+) ADCI with minimal WMH, whereas PiB(-) patients with SVCI (ie, "pure" SVCI) showed both lobar and deep CMBs. In multivariate analyses of the whole cohort, WMH volume and lacuna counts were positively associated with both lobar and deep CMBs, whereas amyloid burden (PiB) was only associated with lobar CMBs. There was an interaction between lacuna burden and PiB retention on lobar (but not deep) CMBs (p<0.001). INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggest that although deep CMBs are mainly linked to subcortical SVD, both subcortical SVD and amyloid-related pathologies (eg, CAA) contribute to the pathogenesis of lobar CMBs, at least in subjects with mixed lobar and deep CMBs. Furthermore, subcortical SVD and amyloid-related pathologies interact to increase the risk of lobar CMBs.


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