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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of both
atherosclerosis
and demential increases with age and therefore the terms "cerebral atherosclerosis" or "cerebro-vascular dementia" are commonly used for any mental deterioration in elderly persons. These names depend on the proposition of a gradual narrowing of cerebral arteries as an inevitable accompaniement of ageing which ends in dementia through a progressive reduction of cerebral blood flow. This apparently reasonnable hypothesis has now been shown to be wrong. ;t has been established that first, senile dementia is not due to cerebral
atherosclerosis
in spite of the frequent coexistence of degenerative and vascular lesions; and secondly, true cerebro vascular dementia results from the destruction of brain tissue following cerebral infarction; hence the proper term is "multi-infarct dementia". This neuronal destruction leads to decrease in cerebral metabolism and blood flow and to intellectual deterioration. The diagnostic criteria are therefore those of cerebral infarcts i.e: arterial hypertension and/or signs of
atherosclerosis
, sudden onset and/or stepwise progression, and focal neurological signs. If one follow those criteria,
multi-infarct dementia
accounts for only about 10% of all dementias; if one does not, the diagnosis will continue to be made to the exclusion of other potentially curable causes of dementias. Five clinico-pathological forms can be distinguished according to the size, number and site of the infarcts: lacunar state, large multiple infarcts, watershed infarction, single infarct and Binswanger's encephalopathy. This distinction is always arbitrary because the association of lacunes and large infarcts is very common in
multi-infarct dementia
. The almost invariable failure of all therapeutic measures once
multi-infarct dementia
has been established stresses the importance of prevention. This depends on prevention of cerebral infarcts, i.e. on the correction of risk factors amongst which arterial hypertension is by far, the most important. Some cases benefit also from carotid surgery, anticoagulants, and antiplatelet drugs but antihypertensive drugs are the most essential part. It is very likely that if all cases of arterial hypertension are properly treated, the incidence of
multi-infarct dementia
will decrease greatly.
...
PMID:[Modern concepts of "cerebrovascular dementia"]. 61 Oct 16
Analysis of the pathology of
multi-infarct dementia
is best carried out using a two-axis approach. The first axis describes the tissue damage, classified as macroinfarcts, cortical microinfarcts, basal ganglionic lacunes, white matter lacunes, dilated perivascular spaces, diffuse white matter rarefaction, and perivascular edema. The second axis describes the vascular abnormalities, classified as
atherosclerosis
involving the extracranial or intracranial arteries, arteriolosclerosis, congophilic angiopathy, emboli, and no structural abnormality. Multiple infarcts and white matter rarefaction are commonly seen as a component of Alzheimer disease, in keeping with the development of congophilic angiopathy and possibly other vascular changes in the latter disease. Evidence is presented to support the concept that the white matter rarefaction of Alzheimer disease and aging is associated with perivascular edema, rather than partial infarction.
...
PMID:The pathological basis of multi-infarct dementia. 205 11
Blood levels of triglycerides, total cholesterol, isolated lipoprotein fractions (VLDL-LDL- and HDL-cholesterol) and apoproteins (Apo-A1 and Apo-B) were examined in
multi-infarct dementia
, senile dementia of the Alzheimer type, ischemic stroke associated with carotid
atherosclerosis
and in control subjects. Forty patients divided into 10 consecutive patients for each group were studied. Alzheimer patients showed mean total cholesterol and Apo-B values significantly higher than control subjects. Apo-B was significantly higher in stroke patients than in controls. The mean lowest HDL-cholesterol (HDL-c) value was observed in stroke patients. No significant differences in mean HDL-c levels were found between patients with multi-infarct and Alzheimer dementia.
...
PMID:Serum lipoprotein pattern variations in dementia and ischemic stroke. 233 Aug 21
We examined 27 elderly patients with
multi-infarct dementia
developed on the basis of cerebral arteriosclerosis. The levels of plasma cholesterol and triglyceride in the patients were 177 +/- 48 and 91 +/- 27 mg/dl (mean +/- SD), respectively. Despite normal plasma lipid levels, the patients had significantly higher plasma apo B (102 +/- 30 vs. 82 +/- 21 mg/dl for controls, P less than 0.01) and lower plasma apo A-I levels (104 +/- 25 vs. 130 +/- 22 mg/dl for controls, P less than 0.01) than the controls. Isoelectric focusing of apo E showed a 2-fold higher relative frequency for the epsilon 4 allele in patients than in Japanese controls (20.8 vs. 8.6-11.7% of total, P less than 0.05). The patients with phenotypes of E4/4 (n = 1) and E4/3 (n = 8) had higher plasma cholesterol levels than those with E3/3 (n = 15) (196 +/- 45 vs. 169 +/- 43 mg/dl). The results indicate that the patients had abnormalities in plasma lipoprotein metabolism and this may contribute to the development of cerebral arteriosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis
1989 Oct
PMID:Plasma apolipoproteins in patients with multi-infarct dementia. 259 34
Levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were found to be significantly lower in 5 men with
multi-infarct dementia
than in 12 men with senile dementia of the Alzheimer type. The large difference between the groups suggests that levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol may be useful in differential diagnosis of these two kinds of senile dementia. The finding also supports the theory that
multi-infarct dementia
may be a complication of
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:High-density lipoprotein cholesterol in differential diagnosis of senile dementia. 286 Mar 90
Fatty acids of plasma lipids, red cells and platelets were analyzed from 38 demented patients (age 53-88 years), comprising 11 patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), 19 with
multi-infarct dementia
(MID) and 8 with probable vascular dementia (PVD). The mean age, body mass index, duration of dementia and content of triglycerides, total cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol in plasma were similar in AD and MID. The patients with PVD were older. As compared to AD, in MID and PVD the linoleic acid (LA) and other n-6 and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were significantly lower in red cells and tended to be lower also in serum triglycerides, cholesterol esters (CHE) and phospholipids (PL), and platelets. The LA content of red cells was significantly correlated with that of serum CHE and PL, and n-6 PUFA (including arachidonic acid) of red cells. The low LA content of red cells was associated with old age, coronary heart disease and heart failure, but not with the severity of dementia.
Atherosclerosis
1987 Jun
PMID:Fatty acids of plasma lipids, red cells and platelets in Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. 361 88
A short neuropsychological test battery designed to measure language, memory and visuospatial abilities was administered to 217 patients with reversible ischemic attacks. Patients were tested twice: the first time more than one month, but less than one year, from the last ischemic episode, and the second time three years later. A comparison between the first and the second testing session did not disclose any significant worsening. The degree of
atherosclerosis
and the occurrence of further ischemic episodes during the follow-up period were found to be unrelated to change in performance at the test battery. These results seems to challenge the hypothesis that
multi-infarct dementia
may follow apparently reversible, or even clinically silent, ischemic episodes.
...
PMID:Three-year neuropsychological follow-up of patients with reversible ischemic attacks. 375 18
Today, multiple, thromboembolically generated cerebral infarcts are regarded as the main pathogenetic pathway of vascular dementia (VAD), with
multi-infarct dementia
(MID) as its clinical counterpart. However, taking into account other vascular mechanisms that may influence the brain, such as vessel-wall damage (
atherosclerosis
, hyalinosis, amyloid angiopathy, or blood-brain barrier dysfunction), cerebrovascular insufficiency (disturbance of systemic circulation, perfusion vulnerability related to the vascular anatomy of the brain, or disturbance of autoregulation), and hyperviscosity, it is evident that MID is not the only VAD category. The diagnosis of MID ought to be reserved for the combination of progressive dementia associated with cerebral ischemic events and evidence of infarction that is mainly associated with the large cerebral arteries. Subcortical white-matter dementia characterized by frontosubcortical symptomatology, white-matter lesions, and small-vessel involvement with or without lacunes/infarcts--a combination of lacunar dementia and Binswanger's disease--appears to be another important VAD disease.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of vascular dementia: mechanisms and subgroups. 839 62
CT images of leuko-araiosis in brain slices were quantified according to volumes of reduced Hounsfield units in frontal periventricular white matter in groups of elderly patients with
multi-infarct dementia
(MID, n = 23) and dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT, n = 16). Volumes of leuko-araiosis, estimates of atrophic cerebral tissue, and local cerebral perfusion utilising inhalation of xenon gas as the indicator were correlated on the same CT slices. Ratios of frontal leuko-araiosis to total brain tissue volume were similar for patients with MID and DAT (mean 5.7 (SD 2.1)% v 6.5 (3.2%)), and both were significantly greater than ratios in elderly normal volunteers (3.1(1.3)%, 0 < 0.001). Cerebral atrophy (measured as the ratio of volumes of cerebrospinal fluid to total brain area) for DAT patients was 17.0 (6.7)%, which was greater than for MID patients (12.5 (5.4)%; p < 0.05) and both types of patients showed more cerebral atrophy than did age matched, elderly normal subjects. Cerebral perfusion was decreased in all regions measured in patients with MID and DAT compared with elderly normal subjects. Multi variate regression analyses correlated frontal leuko-araiosis with reductions of local cerebral blood flow in subcortical grey matter (p < 0.025) in patients with vascular dementia but not in those with DAT. These quantitative measures implicate decreased perfusion due to
atherosclerosis
in territories supplied by the deep penetrating cerebral arteries in the pathogenesis of leuko-araiosis in patients with vascular dementia, but suggest a different pathogenesis for leuko-araiosis in Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Correlations of leuko-araiosis with cerebral atrophy and perfusion in elderly normal subjects and demented patients. 843 7
The aim of this study was to evaluate plasma levels of lipoprotein (a) [LP(a)] and plasminogen in patients affected with atherosclerotic disease and to understand the mutual relationships. Eighty-four patients affected with
atherosclerosis
were examined and divided as follows: group I, 24 patients with peripheral arteriopathy; group II, 40 patients with ischemic heart disease (myocardial infarction and/or angina pectoris); group III, 20 patients with
multi-infarct dementia
; group IV (control group) with 20 healthy young subjects. The results show that Lp(a) plasma levels, in atherosclerotic patients, are higher than 30 mg/dl, while the plasminogen levels are lower than 80 mg/dl. There is an inverse correlation between these two data. Moreover, a different behaviour of Lp(a) and plasminogen rate related to age of patients, to number of atherosclerotic lesions or to acuteness of ischemic heart disease, was observed.
...
PMID:[Lipoprotein (a) and plasminogen in atherosclerosis]. 901 33
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