ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION. How Complex Interactions of Ischemic Brain Infarcts, White Matter Lesions, and Atrophy Relate to Poststroke Dementia

Similar documents
Comparison of Different Clinical Criteria (DSM-III, ADDTC, ICD-10, NINDS-AIREN, DSM-IV) for the Diagnosis of Vascular Dementia

PRESERVE: How intensively should we treat blood pressure in established cerebral small vessel disease? Guide to assessing MRI scans

T he risk of dementia and other cognitive disorders

T he concept of vascular cognitive covers a

MRI is sensitive in the detection of brain stem pathology,

EFFECT OF DIFFERENT DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA ON THE PREVALENCE OF DEMENTIA. Special Article

Diagnosing vascular cognitive impairment and dementia: concepts and controversies

Neuropsychiatric Manifestations in Vascular Cognitive Impairment Patients with and without Dementia

Silent Brain Infarcts and the Risk of Dementia and Cognitive Decline

Research Article Frontal Lobe Atrophy in Depression after Stroke

dem Vascula perspective on frequency and risk factors. Last, but not least, we will consider treatment. PRACTICAL NEUROLOGY

Brain tissue and white matter lesion volume analysis in diabetes mellitus type 2

W hite matter lesions (WMLs) and silent infarcts are

Post-stroke cognitive impairment is common even after successful clinical recovery

Cognitive Functioning after Stroke: A One-Year Follow-Up Study

Visual Rating Scale Reference Material. Lorna Harper Dementia Research Centre University College London

Acute Ischaemic Stroke

Post Stroke Cognitive Decline

Pearls and Pitfalls in Neuroradiology of Cerebrovascular Disease The Essentials with MR and CT

Visual Rating of Age-Related White Matter Changes on Magnetic Resonance Imaging

A Neuropsychiatric, Neuroradiological, and Neuropsychological Profile of a Cohort of Patients with Vascular Dementia

Cognitive variations among vascular dementia subtypes caused by small-, large-, or mixed-vessel disease

Silent Infarction in Patients with First-ever Stroke

Association of White Matter Lesions and Lacunar Infarcts With Executive Functioning

VASCULAR COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT/DEMENTIA SETTING THE STAGE

Medical Neuroscience Tutorial Notes

Yin-Hui Siow MD, FRCPC Director of Nuclear Medicine Southlake Regional Health Centre

Acute stroke. Ischaemic stroke. Characteristics. Temporal classification. Clinical features. Interpretation of Emergency Head CT

1 MS Lesions in T2-Weighted Images

SWI including phase and magnitude images

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has the potential to

CT and MR Imaging in Young Stroke Patients

NEURO IMAGING 2. Dr. Said Huwaijah Chairman of radiology Dep, Damascus Univercity

Vascular Dementia. Laura Pedelty, PhD MD The University of Illinois at Chicago and Jesse Brown VA Medical Center

Essentials of Clinical MR, 2 nd edition. 14. Ischemia and Infarction II

A New Rating Scale for Age-Related White Matter Changes Applicable to MRI and CT

How well does the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project classification predict the site and size of the infarct on brain imaging?

NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Metab Brain Dis. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 October 24.

ISCHEMIC STROKE IMAGING

Regional and Lobe Parcellation Rhesus Monkey Brain Atlas. Manual Tracing for Parcellation Template

Clinical Determinants of Dementia

Supplementary Online Content

Supratentorial cerebral arteriovenous malformations : a clinical analysis

W hite matter high intensity lesions (WML) on T2

Cerebrovascular Disorders. Blood, Brain, and Energy. Blood Supply to the Brain 2/14/11

Psychology, 3 Department of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology,

Cerebral white matter changes (WMCs) are frequently

MRI of Pathological Aging Brain

brain MRI for neuropsychiatrists: what do you need to know

Pediatric MS MRI Study Methodology

September 26 28, 2013 Westin Tampa Harbour Island. Co-sponsored by

P. Hitchcock, Ph.D. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology Kellogg Eye Center. Wednesday, 16 March 2009, 1:00p.m. 2:00p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO

IMAGING IN ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE

Lacunar stroke accounts for 25% of ischemic stroke. 1

Neuroimaging predictors of death and dementia in a cohort of older stroke survivors

Poststroke Dementia. Clinical Features and Risk Factors

CNS Imaging. Dr Amir Monir, MD. Lecturer of radiodiagnosis.

Stroke School for Internists Part 1

review of existing studies on ASL in dementia Marion Smits, MD PhD

Most studies on poststroke cognitive impairment have

Silent Infarction in Acute Stroke Patients. Prevalence, Localization, Risk Factors, and Clinical Significance: The Copenhagen Stroke Study

OBJECTIVES. At the end of the lecture, students should be able to: List the cerebral arteries.

Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)

Anosognosia, or loss of insight into one s cognitive

Silent Cerebral Strokes: Clinical Outcomes and Management

STROKE is the third leading cause of death in the United

[(PHY-3a) Initials of MD reviewing films] [(PHY-3b) Initials of 2 nd opinion MD]

Telencephalon (Cerebral Hemisphere)

Clinical Research on Treating Senile Dementia by Combining Acupuncture with Acupoint-Injection

DISCLOSURES. Objectives. THE EPIDEMIC of 21 st Century. Clinical Assessment of Cognition: New & Emerging Tools for Diagnosing Dementia NONE TO REPORT

CEREBRUM Dr. Jamila Elmedany Dr. Essam Eldin Salama

Zhenyu Jia, MD,* Wasif Mohammed, MD,* Yiru Qiu, MD, Xunning Hong, MD,* and Haibin Shi, MD, PhD*

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Leah Militello, class of 2018

Twenty five percent of stroke survivors have dementia as

IMAGING IN ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE

Cognitive impairment and dementia predict poor

Differential diagnosis of Frontotemporal Dementia FTLD using visual rating scales

Patient with vertigo, dizziness and depression

Localizing lesion locations to predict extent of aphasia recovery. Abstract

Standing strong in the roaring 40s ANZFPS November HOBART. Credit: Tourism Tasmania and Garry Moore

There is no gold standard for the diagnosis of

Department of Neurology, Soonchunhyang University Bucheon Hospital, Bucheon, Korea

Outline of the next three lectures

FILE / PERIVENTRICULAR MICROVASCULAR ISCHEMIC CHANGES EBOOK

Exclusion: MRI. Alcoholism. Method of Memory Research Unit, Department of Neurology (University of Helsinki) and. Exclusion: Severe aphasia

N europsychiatric symptoms can induce marked disability

Remission of diffusion lesions in acute stroke magnetic resonance imaging

Leukoaraiosis and Dementia in Hypertensive Patients

Blood Supply. Allen Chung, class of 2013

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION In format provided by Frank et al. (JULY 2010)

Cerebral Cortex 1. Sarah Heilbronner

Assessing Brain Volumes Using MorphoBox Prototype

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative

The central nervous system

Diagnostic improvement from average image in acute ischemic stroke

NACC Vascular Consortium. NACC Vascular Consortium. NACC Vascular Consortium

Transcription:

ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION How Complex Interactions of Ischemic Brain Infarcts, White Matter Lesions, and Atrophy Relate to Poststroke Dementia Tarja Pohjasvaara, MD, PhD; Riitta Mäntylä, MD; Oili Salonen, MD, PhD; Hannu J. Aronen, MD, PhD; Raija Ylikoski, PhD; Marja Hietanen, PhD; Markku Kaste, MD, PhD; Timo Erkinjuntti, MD, PhD Background: Cerebrovascular disease is a major factor related to cognitive impairment. However, behavioral correlates of ischemic brain lesions are insufficiently characterized. Objective: To examine magnetic resonance imaging correlates of dementia in a large, well-defined series of patients with ischemic stroke. Methods: Detailed medical, neurological, and neuropsychological examinations were conducted 3 months after ischemic stroke for 337 of 486 consecutive patients aged 55 to 85 years. Infarcts (type, site, side, number, and volume), extent of white matter lesions (WMLs), and degree of atrophy were categorized according to magnetic resonance images of the head. The definition for dementia of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition (DSM-III) was used. Results: Dementia was diagnosed in 107 (31.8%) of the patients and stroke-related dementia in 87 (25.8%). Volumes, numbers, distinct sites of infarcts, extent of WMLs, and degree of atrophy were different for the demented and nondemented subjects. Particularly, volumes of infarcts in any (right- or left-sided) superior middle cerebral artery territory (27.3 vs 13.7 cm 3, P=.002) and left thalamocortical connection (14.8 vs 4.0 cm 3, P=.002) differentiated the 2 groups. Logistic regression analysis showed that the correlates of any dementia included the combination of infarct features (volume of infarcts in any superior middle cerebral artery: odds ratio [OR], 1.11; frequency of left-sided infarcts: OR, 1.21), extent of WMLs (OR, 1.3), medial temporal lobe atrophy (OR, 2.1), and host factors (education; OR, 0.91). In the patients with stroke-related dementia, the main correlate was volume of infarcts in the left anterior corona radiata (OR, 1.68). Conclusion: Correlates of poststroke dementia do not include merely 1 feature but a combination of infarct features, extent of WMLs, medial temporal lobe atrophy, and host features. Arch Neurol. 2000;57:1295-1300 From the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Memory Research Unit (Drs Pohjasvaara, Ylikoski, Hietanen, and Erkinjuntti), Stroke Unit (Dr Kaste), and Department of Radiology (Drs Mäntylä, Salonen, and Aronen), Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland. STROKE INCREASES the risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. 1,2 Vascular dementia is the second most common cause of dementia, and vascular factors are also related to Alzheimer disease. 3 Thus, vascular burden is a major factor related to cognitive impairment and dementia. 4 Ischemic lesions of the brain can cause, contribute, or only coexist with cognitive changes, 5 but the mechanisms related to vascular cognitive impairment are still subject to debate. 5,6 Previous computed tomography (CT) 7-11 and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) 12-13 studies on radiological correlates of poststroke dementia have been partly contradictory. 14 These studies report various combinations of infarct features (type, side, site, number, and volume), white matter lesions (WMLs; site and extent), cerebral atrophy (cortical and central), and host factors (age and education) to be correlates of poststroke dementia. Thus far, only a few series on poststroke dementia have applied multivariate approaches. 9-11,13 The case-control series of nondemented (n=24) and demented (n=24) stroke patients by Liu et al 13 identified age, volume of infarcts, WMLs, and left-sided infarcts on MRI as independent correlates of poststroke dementia. In a CT series of patients with subcortical stroke (nondemented, n=45; demented, n=12), Figueroa et al 10 related dementia to lesions in the left thalamus and anterior capsule. The aim of the present study was to examine MRI correlates of poststroke dementia in a well-defined, large consecutive series of patients with ischemic stroke. 1295

SUBJECTS AND METHODS Procedures of the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study cohort have been detailed in a report on methods and baseline findings. 2 Briefly, 486 consecutive patients aged 55 to 85 years were evaluated 3 months after ischemic stroke. Of the 486 patients, 337 (69.3%) had a completed MRI of the head and a comprehensive neuropsychological examination. The reasons for exclusions as well as comparison of the included and excluded patients are detailed in a previous report. 2 A structured medical and neurological history 2 was recorded based on review of all available hospital charts, an interview of the subject and a knowledgeable informant, and a structured clinical and neurological examination performed by a board-certified neurologist (T.P.) and a senior neurologist (T.E.). The criteria for dementia were those of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition (DSM-III). 15 Cognitive domains of the DSM-III definition assessed by the neuropsychological test battery included memory functions (short- and long-term memory), executive functions, abstract thinking, judgment, aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, constructional and visuospatial abilities, and personality change. 16 Instead of using the more recent definitions for dementia, 2 we chose the DSM-III definition used in a previous comparative stroke cohort. 1,17,18 Assessment of the patient s ability to work and to perform basic activities of daily life and complex activities of daily life was performed with 5 scales 2 reflecting functions before and 3 months after the index stroke. Assessment of prestroke cognitive impairment was based on interviews with the patient and a knowledgeable informant as described in a previous report. 19 Altogether, 31 patients had prestroke cognitive impairment, and they were excluded from the group with stroke-related dementia (n=306; demented, n=87). This accords with definitions used in earlier studies. 16,17,19 Education was divided into 2 categories: low (0-6 years of formal education) and high ( 6 years of formal education). Magnetic resonance imaging was performed with a superconducting system operating at 1.0 T (Siemens Magnetom, Erlangen, Germany) as detailed before. 19 All MRIs were reviewed by the same neuroradiologist (R.M.), who was blinded to the clinical data. The number, location, and size of focal lesions were recorded. Lesions equivalent to the signal characteristics of cerebrospinal fluid on T1- weighted images and measuring more than 3 mm in diameter as well as wedge-shaped cortical-subcortical lesions were regarded as brain infarcts. The size of the lesion was grouped into 4 categories based on the largest diameter (3-9, 10-29, 30-59, and 60 mm), and the radii used for calculations were 3, 10, 20, and 30 mm, respectively. The volume of the lesion was estimated using a formula for calculating the volume of a ball. The sites included lobes (cortical-subcortical lesions in the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes), vascular territories (deep and superficial anterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery [MCA], and posterior cerebral artery [PCA] areas as well as internal carotid artery), border zone area), and specific locations (putamen, caudate, pallidum, thalamus, genu of internal capsule, anterior and posterior capsule, anterior and posterior corona radiata, anterior and posterior centrum semiovale, and angular gyrus). The thalamocortical connection, which is part of the prefrontal subcortical circuit of Cummings, 20 included the genu, anterior capsule, anterior corona radiata, and anterior centrum semiovale. 21 RESULTS Of the 337 patients with ischemic stroke, any dementia was present in 107 (31.8%) and stroke-related dementia in 87 (25.8%). The excluded patients had an older mean age (mean [SD], 73.3 [7.4] years vs 70.2 [7.7] years; P =.002) but did not differ in terms of main demographic and clinical features, including sex, education, and number, side, and site of stroke. 16 The patients with any dementia were older (mean [SD], 71.4 [7.6] vs 69.6 [7.7] years; P=.04) and more often had less than 6 years of education (37.4% vs 23.9%, P=.009) compared with the nondemented subjects. The total number of infarcts on MRI scans of the 337 patients was 1144. Of the infarcts, 341 (29.8%) were clinically related to the index stroke, 216 (18.9%) were nonrelated, and 587 (51.3%) were silent. Altogether, 548 (47.9%) of the infarcts were located on the left hemisphere and 637 (55.7%) were lacunar. The types (nonlacunar vs lacunar and related vs nonrelated) of infarcts were similar in the patients with and without any poststroke dementia (data not shown). Mean volumes of the infarcts in the patients with and without any poststroke dementia are detailed in Table 1. The mean total volume of infarcts was 37.7 cm 3 in the demented and 22.5 cm 3 in the nondemented group (P =.002). Furthermore, the patients with dementia showed larger volumes of all right-sided infarcts, infarcts in any (right- or left-sided) superior MCA and parietal areas, infarcts in right superior MCA and PCA areas, as well as infarcts in the left caudate, anterior capsule, corona radiata, and centrum semiovale. Mean volume of infarcts in the left thalamocortical projection (14.8 vs 4.0 cm 3, P=.02) differentiated the 2 groups. Furthermore, volumes of the related infarcts in the right parietal area (26.4 vs 12.8 cm 3, P=.04), in the left anterior capsule (1.8 vs 0.05 cm 3, P=.02), and in the left thalamocortical connection (19.0 vs 5.4 cm 3, P=.04) were larger in the dementia group. Mean frequencies of infarcts in the patients with and without dementia are specified in Table 2. The mean total number of infarcts was higher in the dementia group. In addition to the conclusions based on the volumes of infarcts, examining the frequency of infarcts indicated areas where the total infarct volume remained small but the frequency could be critical. These areas included the deep PCA areas as well as the putamen, pallidum, and thalamus, which were affected mainly by lacunar infarcts. The degree of moderate and severe WMLs and cerebral atrophy is presented in Table 3. The mean Fazekas WML score was higher in the dementia group (3.8 vs 2.9, 1296

The histories of previous and present (index) stroke on MRI, including clinical symptoms and radiological lesions, were reviewed together by a board-certified neurologist (T.P.) and neuroradiologist (R.M.). Infarcts were defined as related or old infarcts depending on their relation to present or previous symptoms. Infarcts that did not have any relation to the patient s present or previous symptoms were defined as silent infarcts. Infarction was defined as lacunar if it was situated in deep white or gray matter and it was3to9mm. White matter lesions (hyperintensities) were rated on proton density weighted images in 6 areas: around the frontal and posterior horns, along the bodies of lateral ventricles, and in the subcortical, deep, and watershed areas. 21 Periventricular WMLs around the frontal and posterior horns were classified based on size and shape into small cap ( 5 mm), smooth halo (6-10 mm), and extending cap ( 10 mm). White matter lesions along the bodies of lateral ventricles were classified into thin lining ( 5 mm), smooth halo (6-10 mm), and irregular halo ( 10 mm). White matter lesions in the subcortical, deep, and watershed areas were classified based on size (greatest diameter) and shape into small focal ( 5 mm), large focal (6-10 mm), focal confluent (11-25 mm), diffusely confluent ( 25 mm), and extensive (diffuse hyperintensity without distinct focal lesions affecting most of the white matter area). The number of each type of WML was counted, and a rating of absent or present was assigned for extensive WMLs. 22,23 The extent of WMLs was then graded using a 4-point scale proposed by Fazekas et al. 22,24 Brain atrophy was rated from 0 to 3 (none, mild, moderate, and severe) by comparison with standard images according to the methods of Scheltens et al 25 and Erkinjuntti et al. 26 Cortical atrophy and central brain atrophy were rated separately: cortical atrophy in the frontal, parietal, and occipital lobes and in the temporal neocortex, entorhinal cortex (parahippocampal gyrus), and hippocampal formation; and central atrophy in the temporal, frontal, and occipital horns of the lateral ventricles as well as at the bodies of the lateral ventricle. Temporal atrophy was evaluated on 3 coronal slices (the slice showing the interpeduncular cistern and the 2 slices on either side). Medial temporal lobe atrophy included the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus. The intraobserver and interobserver reliabilities for rating WMLs and atrophy were tested and were found to be good (for white matter changes, weighted, 0.72-0.95; for atrophy, weighted, 0.61-0.82). 22 The study was approved by the ethics committee of the Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland. The study design was first fully explained, and written information was offered to the patients, and if they agreed to participate, a written consent form was signed. In the statistical procedure, we compared the patients with and without DSM-III dementia. The 2 test was applied for categorical data and the pooled t test for continuous data. We analyzed separately the frequencies, mean frequencies, and volumes of all and related lesions. Age, education, and the radiological variables that significantly differentiated the demented and nondemented patients were entered into a multiple logistic regression analysis following 2 different approaches to evaluate the correlates dementia and cognitive impairment: model 1, any dementia, and model 2, stroke-related dementia. No adjustments were made for multiple comparisons in statistical approaches. The statistics were analyzed using the BMDP (Los Angeles, Calif) and SAS (version 6; SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC) programs. P.001). Moderate and severe degrees of atrophy, especially medial temporal lobe atrophy (40.0% vs 19.6%, P.001), differentiated the 2 groups. In addition, we evaluated a possible association between WMLs and atrophy. The mean WML score was higher in the patients having any moderate or severe cortical atrophy (3.5 vs 2.8, P.001), medial temporal lobe atrophy (3.9 vs 2.9, P.001), or any moderate or severe central atrophy (3.6 vs 2.7, P.001). Furthermore, we used a logistic regression model to identify the independent correlates of dementia in the whole series. In the first approach (model 1; 337 total patients, 107 demented patients), age, education, the mean frequencies and volumes of all infarcts, rightand left-sided infarcts separately, all the areas in volume described above that significantly differentiated the nondemented from the demented patients in univariate analyses, WMLs as measured by the Fazekas 4-point white matter scale, any moderate or severe central atrophy, and medial temporal lobe atrophy (not present, 0; present, 1) and were included in the model. The following correlates of any poststroke dementia were found (Table 4): medial temporal lobe atrophy (odds ratio [OR], 2.10; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10-3.90), WMLs (OR, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.10-1.60), mean frequency of left-sided infarcts (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.01-1.47), volume of the infarcts in MCA (OR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.04-1.20), and education (OR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.85-0.98). In the second approach (model 2; 306 total patients; 87 demented patients), the focus was stroke-related dementia and the correlates were volume of infarcts in left anterior corona radiata (OR 1.68; 95% CI, 1.12-2.77), WMLs (OR 1.28; 95% CI, 1.10-1.56), volume of infarcts in MCA (OR 1.20; 95% CI, 1.05-1.24), and education (OR 0.92; 95% CI, 0.85-0.98). COMMENT The present series is thus far the largest well-defined consecutive series examining MRI correlates of poststroke dementia. The independent correlates of any poststroke dementia in the present series included the combination of infarct features (volume of infarcts in superior MCA and frequency of left-sided infarcts), extent of WMLs, medial temporal lobe atrophy, and host factors (education). The correlates of strokerelated dementia included infarct features (volume of infarcts in right-sided superior MCA and left anterior corona radiata), extent of WMLs, and host factors (education). The increased risk of poststroke dementia associated with most of the quantitative imaging variables, however, was modest. 1297

Table 1. Ischemic Infarct Volume in Without and With DSM-III Dementia in the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study Cohort (N = 337)* Ischemic Infarct Table 2. Ischemic Infarct Frequency in Without and With DSM-III Dementia in the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study Cohort (N = 337)* Mean (SD) Total No. of Infarcts Nondemented (n = 230) Mean (SD) Volume, cm 2 Nondemented (n = 230) Demented (n = 107) Any, all 22.5 (33.4) 37.7 (51.0).002 Right side 19.4 (34.8) 32.7 (47.9).01 Superior MCA All 13.7 (29.1) 27.3 (43.7).001 Right side 12.7 (30.4) 24.5 (43.5).01 Superior PCA, right side 5.8 (19.3) 12.2 (30.6).048 Parietal, all 8.9 (25.4) 17.0 (39.0).03 Nucleus caudatus, left side 0.5 (2.9) 2.9 (13.9).04 Anterior capsule, all 0.1 (0.6) 1.3 (6.3).02 Anterior corona radiata, all 8.1 (25.9) 17.7 (36.8).008 Left side 1.7 (10.3) 6.6 (22.4).02 Centrum semiovale, left side 1.8 (10.6) 6.0 (22.2).048 Thalamocortical connections All 22.5 (77.4) 43.4 (95.5).04 Left side 4.0 (20.4) 14.8 (47.3).02 Posterior centrum semiovale, all 9.3 (25.6) 16.9 (38.2).04 *DSM-III indicates Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition 15 ; MCA, middle cerebral artery; PCA, posterior cerebral artery. The thalamocortical connection included the genu, anterior capsule, anterior corona radiata, and anterior centrum semiovale. Demented (n = 107) Any, all 2.7 (2.1) 3.6 (2.7).001 Right side 1.4 (1.4) 1.8 (1.7).03 Left side 1.3 (1.3) 1.8 (1.5).003 MCA, all 0.9 (1.0) 1.1 (1.2).03 Deep PCA All 0.5 (0.8) 0.8 (0.9).007 Left side 0.2 (0.5) 0.4 (0.6).002 Pallidum, left side 0.1 (0.3) 0.3 (0.5).005 Putamen, all 0.4 (0.7) 0.6 (0.8).04 Anterior corona radiata All 0.2 (0.5) 0.4 (0.6).04 Right side 0.1 (0.4) 0.2 (0.4).04 Thalamus, all 0.3 (0.6) 0.4 (0.6).04 *DSM-III indicates Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition 15 ; MCA, middle cerebral artery; PCA, posterior cerebral artery. P P Table 3. Moderate and Severe White Matter Hyperintensity and Cerebral Atrophy on the Right Side in Without and With DSM-III Dementia in the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study Cohort (N = 337)* Region Moderate/Severe White Matter Hyperintensity and Cerebral Atrophy, % Nondemented (n = 230) Demented (n = 107) All (N = 337) P Periventricular 40.9 67.3 54.3.001 Centrum semiovale 19.2 30.8 22.9.02 Watershed areas 29.5 42.3 33.6.02 Subcortical 5.9 12.5 8.0.04 Fazekas white matter 2.9 (1.5) 3.8 (1.5) 3.2 (1.5).001 score, mean (SD) Any cortical 59.1 62.7 61.5.52 Entorhinal 18.6 39.1 25.2.001 Hippocampal 12.7 32.4 19.1.001 Medial temporal 19.6 40.0 26.2.001 Any central 47.7 64.8 53.2.004 *DSM-III indicates Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition. 15 Table 4. Correlates of Poststroke Dementia Using Multiple Logistic Models in the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study Stroke Cohort* Variable (SE) OR (95%CI) Model 1: Any Poststroke Dementia (337 Total, 107 Demented ) Medial temporal lobe atrophy 0.7255 (0.3230) 2.10 (1.1 3.9) White matter hyperintensity 0.2609 (0.0932) 1.30 (1.10 1.60) Frequency of infarcts, left 0.1939 (0.0971) 1.21 (1.01 1.47) MCA superior infarct volume 0.1056 (0.0364) 1.11 (1.04 1.20) Education 0.0903 (0.0345) 0.91 (0.85 0.98) Constant 1.4576... Model 2: Stroke-Related Dementia (306 Total, 87 Demented ) Anterior corona radiata 0.5158 (0.2247) 1.68 (1.12 2.77) infarct volume, left White matter hyperintensity 0.2467 (0.0999) 1.28 (1.10 1.56) MCA superior infarct 0.1318 (0.0435) 1.20 (1.05 1.24) volume, right Education 0.0842 (0.0372) 0.92 (0.85 0.98) Constant 1.5739... *OR indicates odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; and MCA, middle cerebral artery. Ellipses indicate no data calculated for constant values. Excluded dementia related to Alzheimer disease or cardiovascular disease. A larger total volume of infarcts was detected in the dementia group, which accords with a few 10,11,13 but deviates from some 8,9,12 of the previous studies. The total number of infarcts was also higher in the dementia group, as shown in most 8-11,13,21 but not all 12 previous series. In the patients with poststroke dementia, we identified larger volumes of right-sided infarcts (superior MCA and PCA areas) and a larger volume and number of infarcts in strategic sites in the left hemisphere (thalamocortical connection, putamen, pallidus, and deep PCA areas). Liu et al 13 also reported larger volumes of left-sided infarcts. A higher frequency of infarcts in the left hemisphere was also found in the series reported by Gorelick et al 27 and Figueroa et al. 10 A higher frequency of infarcts in the left hemisphere is further supported by clinical series on poststroke dementia. 16,17 A higher frequency of infarcts in the left hemisphere in the total group, but not in the group with stroke-related dementia, suggests the importance of multiple infarcts (old or silent) in the stroke-related dementia group. 1298

The critical role of infarcts involving the thalamocortical connection (including the genu and anterior capsule, anterior corona radiata, and anterior centrum semiovale) is also supported by previous studies showing left anterior capsule infarcts 10 and frontal lesions 11 as independent correlates of poststroke dementia. In the present series, we found the volume of infarcts in the left anterior corona radiata, part of the thalamocortical connection, to be an independent correlate of strokerelated dementia. Also, the seminal case study by Tatemichi et al 21 showed the role of lesions affecting the thalamocortical connection in relation to incident poststroke dementia. Censori et al, 11 in a series of patients with first-ever stroke, reported more frequent stroke-related dementia. Tatemichi et al, 8 in a nonselected series of poststroke patients, reported more frequent dementia among patients with nonrelated infarcts. We did not find any significant difference in our groups, but the volume of related infarcts in the anterior capsule, thalamocortical connection, parietal lobe, and right hemisphere was larger in the demented than the nondemented patients. Frequency of infarcts (mainly lacunar) in the deep gray matter (pallidum, putamen, and thalamus), especially on the left side, was higher in the dementia group. This contrasts with some of the previous reports, which did not show a difference. 8,13 Extensive WMLs, both in the periventricular and the deep white matter areas, differentiated the demented from nondemented patients in the present series in accordance with some 8,13,21,28 but not all 10-13 of the previous studies, which may reflect sample selection, especially in regard to small-vessel disease. Frequency of infarcts in the deep gray matter (56% of all infarcts were lacunae) as well as the extensive WMLs support the idea that smallvessel disease is a major etiopathogenetic factor in poststroke dementia. Stroke patients are more likely to have WMLs than age-matched controls. White matter lesions are associated with an increased risk of poststroke dementia and indicate a higher risk of stroke recurrence. 29 In the present series, infarcts and WMLs had an independent correlation with poststroke dementia. This accords with the CT series reported by Gorelick et al, 27 the MRI series reported by Liu et al, 13 as well as the community-based clinical CT study reported by Skoog et al. 30 In previous studies, central atrophy 9,12,13 as well as both central and cortical atrophy 8,19,28 have occurred more frequent in patients with poststroke dementia. However, this has not been confirmed by all studies. 10,11 In the present series, both central and medial temporal lobe atrophy clearly differentiated the demented from the nondemented patients. Medial temporal lobe atrophy was also an independent correlate of any poststroke dementia. Because of strong intercorrelations between atrophy, WMLs, and infarcts, medial temporal lobe atrophy did not reach significant independent correlation (P.001) with stroke-related dementia in the logistic model. This was also the case in the studies by Gorelick et al 27 and Liu et al. 13 High frequency of medial temporal lobe atrophy may reflect the coexistence of Alzheimer disease 31 but may also be related to delayed ischemic injury in hippocampal areas associated with selective vulnerability. As a host factor, education was an independent correlate of poststroke dementia in the present study, similar to the findings of Gorelick et al. 27 In our series, the patients with poststroke dementia were also older. Age also has been an independent predictor of poststroke dementia in 2 previous series. 11,13 Possible study limitations include the following: (1) The present study of hospital-based patients 3 months poststroke may not be representative of community dwelling poststroke patients, because the oldest patients and those with the most severe stroke may not have been admitted to the emergency department of the Helsinki University Central Hospital. Large communitybased series could overcome these limitations. (2) There is a lack of neuropathological validation of dementia diagnosis and neuroradiologic findings. (3) Simple ratings of atrophy and WMLs as well as volume estimates of infarcts may be less precise than volumetric methods, especially if groupwise statistical picture analysis could be applied. (4) Multiple statistical comparisons raise the potential problem of showing falsely significant differences. (5) Differences in patient populations studied and definitions of dementia used may limit comparisons with other studies. In conclusion, this study verifies that correlates of poststroke dementia cannot be represented by a single feature, but rather by a combination of infarct features, extent of WMLs, medial temporal lobe atrophy, and host features. Accepted for publication January 24, 2000. This study was supported in part by grants from the Medical Council of the Academy of Finland (Drs Mäntylä, Aronen, and Ekinjuntti); the Clinical Research Institute, Helsinki University Central Hospital (Drs Pohjasvaara and Mäntylä); the Finnish Alzheimer Foundation for Research (Drs Pohjasvaara and Erkinjuntti); and the Paavo Nurmi Foundation (Dr Aronen); and by the Research Grant from the Helsinki University Central Hospital (Dr Aronen) and the University of Helsinki (Dr Erkinjuntti), all in Helsinki, Finland. We thank Vesa Kuusela, senior research officer, Statistics Finland, Helsinki, for statistical support and review. Corresponding author: Timo Erkinjuntti, MD, PhD, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Helsinki University Central Hospital, PO Box 300, FIN-00029 HYKS, Helsinki, Finland (e-mail: timo.erkinjuntti@huch.fi). REFERENCES 1. Tatemichi TK, Desmond DW, Mayeux R, et al. Dementia after stroke: baseline frequency, risks, and clinical features in a hospitalized cohort. Neurology. 1992; 42:1185-1193. 2. Pohjasvaara T, Erkinjuntti T, Vataja R, Kaste M. Dementia three months after stroke: baseline frequency and effect of different definitions of dementia in the Helsinki Stroke Aging Memory Study (SAM) cohort. Stroke. 1998;24:35-41. 3. Snowdon DA, Greiner LH, Mortimer JA, Riley KP, Greiner PA, Markesbery WR. Brain infarction and the critical expression of Alzheimer disease: the Nun Study. JAMA. 1997;277:813-817. 4. Hachinski VC. Preventable senility: a call for action against the vascular dementias. Lancet. 1992;21:856-866. 1299

5. Erkinjuntti T, Hachinski VC. Rethinking vascular dementia. Cerebrovasc Dis. 1993; 3:3-23. 6. Pasquir F, Leys D. Why are stroke patients prone to develop dementia? J Neurol. 1997;244:135-142. 7. Ladurner G, Iliff LD, Lechner H. Clinical factors associated with dementia in ischaemic stroke. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1982;45:97-101. 8. Tatemichi TK, Foulker MA, Mohr JP, et al. Dementia in stroke survivors in the Stroke Data Bank Cohort: prevalence, incidence, risk factors, and computed tomographic findings. Stroke. 1990;21:858-866. 9. Schmidt R, Mechtler L, Kinkel PR, Fazekas F, Kinkel WR, Freidl W. Cognitive impairment after acute supratentorial stroke: a 6-month follow-up clinical and computed tomographic study. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 1993;243:11-15. 10. Figueroa M, Tatemichi TK, Desmond DW, Gropen T, Cross DT. Dementia following subcortical stroke: the role of infarct location. Neurology. 1993;43:A244. 11. Censori B, Manara O, Agostinis C, et al. Dementia after first stroke. Stroke. 1996; 27:1205-1210. 12. Hershey LA, Modic MT, Greenough PG, Jaffe DF. Magnetic resonance imaging in vascular dementia. Neurology. 1987;37:29-36. 13. Liu CK, Miller BL, Cummings JL, et al. A quantitative MRI study of vascular dementia. Neurology. 1992;42:138-143. 14. Erkinjuntti T, Bowler JV, DeCarli CS, et al. Imaging of static brain lesions in vascular dementia: implications for clinical trials. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 1999; 13(suppl 3):S81-S90. 15. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association; 1980. 16. Pohjasvaara T, Erkinjuntti T, Ylikoski R, Hietanen M, Vataja R, Kaste M. Clinical determinants of poststroke dementia. Stroke. 1998;29:75-81. 17. Tatemichi TK, Desmond DW, Paik M, et al. Clinical determinants of dementia related to stroke. Ann Neurol. 1993;33:568-575. 18. Tatemichi TK, Paik M, Bagiella E, et al. Risk of dementia after stroke in a hospitalized cohort: results of a longitudinal study. Neurology. 1994;44:1885-1891. 19. Pohjasvaara T, Mäntylä R, Aronen HJ, et al. Clinical and radiological determinants of prestroke cognitive decline in a stroke cohort. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1999;67:742-748. 20. Cummings JL. Frontal-subcortical circuits and human behavior. Arch Neurol. 1993; 50:873-880. 21. Tatemichi TK, Desmond DW, Prohovnik I, et al. Confusion and memory loss from capsular genu infarction: a thalamocortical disconnection syndrome? Neurology. 1992;42:1966-1979. 22. Mäntylä R, Erkinjuntti T, Salonen O, et al. Variable agreement between visual rating scales for white matter hyperintensities on MRI: comparison of 13 rating scales in a poststroke cohort. Stroke. 1997;28:1614-1623. 23. Mäntylä R, Aronen HJ, Salonen O, et al. The prevalence and distribution of whitematter changes on different MRI pulse sequences in a post-stroke cohort. Neuroradiology. 1999;41:657-665. 24. Fazekas F, Chawluk JB, Alavi A, Hurtig HI, Zimmerman RA. MR signal abnormalities at 1.5 T in Alzheimer s dementia and normal aging. Am J Roentgenol. 1987;149:351-356. 25. Scheltens P, Leys D, Barkhof F, et al. Atrophy of medial temporal lobes on MRI in probable Alzheimer s disease and normal ageing: diagnostic value and neuropsychological correlates. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1992;55: 967-972. 26. Erkinjuntti T, Lee DH, Gao F, et al. Temporal lobe atrophy on MRI in the diagnosis of early Alzheimer s disease. Arch Neurol. 1993;50:305-310. 27. Gorelick PB, Chatterjee A, Patel D, et al. Cranial computed tomographic observations in multi-infarct dementia: a controlled study. Stroke. 1992;23:801-811. 28. Fukuda H, Kobayashi S, Okada K, Tsunematsu T. Frontal white matter lesions and dementia in lacunar infarction. Stroke. 1990;21:1143-1149. 29. Leys D, Henon H, Pasquier F. White matter changes and poststroke dementia. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 1998;9(suppl 1):25-29. 30. Skoog I, Nilsson L, Palmertz B, Andreasson LA, Svanborg A. A populationbased study of dementia in 85-year-olds. N Engl J Med. 1993;328:153-158. 31. Henon H, Pasquier F, Durieu I, Pruvo JP, Leys D. Medial temporal lobe atrophy in stroke patients: relation to pre-existing dementia. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1998;65:641-647. 1300