Vascular Neurocognitive Disorders and the Vascular Risk Factors
Highlights
- Dementia is a neurocognitive disorder with multiple and severe (individual, social, and economic) implications.
- Lifestyle changes implying stress reduction, regular physical exercise, decreasing dietary fat, social integration and mental stimulation in the elderly population are important factors in preventing or limiting the symptoms of dementia.
Abstract
:Highlights:
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- Dementia is a neurocognitive disorder with multiple and severe (individual, social, and economic) implications.
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- Lifestyle changes implying stress reduction, regular physical exercise, decreasing dietary fat, social integration and mental stimulation in the elderly population are important factors in preventing or limiting the symptoms of dementia
Introduction
Discussion
- Cortical vascular dementia or multi infarct dementia, (Multi-infarct Dementia), characterized by the presence of infarcts in the cortical and subcortical regions of the cerebral arteries and clinically by the existence of motor deficits, unilateral sensitivity disorders, and the gross occurrence of cognitive decline and aphasia.
- Subcortical vascular dementia or the dementia of small bloood vessels, (Subcortical Ischemic Vascular Dementia or Bisswangerʼs Disease), a condition of cerebral insufficiency and Bisswangerʼs disease, clinically characterized by pure motor deficits, signs of bulbar palsy, dysarthria emotional lability, or deficits of executive functions.
- Cortical and subcortical vascular dementia, (Mixed Dementia) with mixed components.
- Other types of vascular dementia are: vasculits, cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), and hereditary disease such as CADASIL (Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts And Leukoencefalopathy).
- Post-ischemic encephalopathy that is divided into 3 subentities:
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- the cortical laminar necrosis, localized in the areas of arterial border associated with the diffuse deterioration of white matter;
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- multiple post-ischemic injuries that have as a substratum the hypotension and enlargement of the vascular wall with the reduction of the cerebral blood flow and the generation of minor cortical and subcortical infarctions;
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- hippocampal sclerosis characterized at the neuropathological level by neuronal loss and gliosis, noticed in patients over 85 years olds who were not previously affected by the Alzheimerʼs dementia, but with pathological antecedents of cardiac insufficiency and cerebral hypoperfusion.
- 2.
- Hemorrhagic dementia. Cerebral bleedings do not regularly cause dementias. However, there may be a connection between cerebral bleedings and NCD, depending on its localization and/or dimension, or in the case of cortical and subcortical hemorrhages, whether the patient had arterial hypertension antecedents. According to several hypotheses, several mechanisms might explain the appearance and development of certain neurocognitive disorders for patients affected by a stroke, such as [5,6,12]:
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- the cerebral injuries determined by an ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, involving neurological deficits (motor deficits, sensitivity, language or sight disorders, etc.) can result in perturbations of superior nervous functions, having as clinical expression minor or major neurocognitive disorders;
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- after an ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, the neurocognitive disorder may actually be a continuation of a preexistent state, such as the Alzheimer dementia, not made known by the patient, or not diagnosed before the cerebrovascular event;
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- the recidivated ischemic stroke can lead to the development of the neurocognitive disorders; as is well known, multiple ischemic attacks can favor the development of certain cognitive disorders characterized by a rapid progressive model (multi infarction dementia).
- Arterial enlargement with the consecutive narrowing of the lumen, modifications resulting from factors such as arterial hypertension, certain diseases, dyslipidemia, or genetic factors. These modifications are represented by deposits of fibrinoid, the hypertrophy of the flat musculature, and other elements of conjunctive tissue present in the arterial wall, a phenomenon called fibrinoid degeneration and lipohyalinosis [11].
- Obstruction of the origins of penetrating arteries by parent large intracranial artery intimal plaques. It has been noticed that these modifications of the cerebral large blood vessels are much more important for the determination of a stroke than the intrinsic injury of the small blood vessels. Thus, the decrease in the blood flow in the cerebral small arteries or their obstruction is generated either by the existence of the atheroma plaque, that can be situated at the level of the large cerebral blood vessels, or by the existence of the microatheromas that can be found precisely on the place of origin of the small arteries. The atheroma plaque initially takes shape by the enlargement of the main blood vessels followed by the deposition of the lipids in the blood, the accumulation of lipid laden macrophages, cholesterol crystals and the deposition of calcium at the level of the main blood vessels.
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- Significant hemodynamic stenosis of the large cerebral blood vessels affected by atherosclerosis or arteriopathy that affects the small cerebral vessels, reducing the cerebral blood flow, without the induction of cerebral lesions leads to the development of a cognitive deterioration syndrome; this mechanism is not sufficiently investigated [3]. We also note, in the context of the injury of the cerebral microcirculation, the existence of the incomplete ischemia and of the selective tissue necrosis that are clinically characterized by the cognitive decline [13,14].
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- Structural alterations of the small cerebral blood vessels, such as arteriosclerosis, lipohyalinosis, cerebral amyloid angiopathy CAA, CADASIL, etc., that can determine the lacunar strokes or modifications of the typical cerebral white matter seem to be responsible for the development of certain cognitive disorders similar to those related to subcortical vascular dementia [15,16,17]. At the level of the small blood vessels, apart from the fibrinoid degeneration and lipohyalinosis, there is also the possibility of accumulation of a granular material that can infiltrate from the main blood vessels to the tunica adventitia of the arterial wall. This aspect is specific to the hereditary diseases such as CADASIL. Anatomopathological studies have also revealed the presence of glycoproteins at the level of the arterial wall, whereas the muscle fibres present in the medium tunic are hypertrophied, deteriorated, and the vascular endothelium can be absent or replaced with the cholagen [11]. Devoid of the muscle layer, the vascular wall in the CAA becomes thicker due to a hyaline, acellular material, while the presence of A-beta peptide in persons diagnosed with arterial hypertension increases the brain’s vulnerability to the ischemic lesions. It has been demonstrated that the CAA rarely causes spontaneous cerebral hemorrhages [7].
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- vascular: arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking, generalized atherosclerosis, other heart diseases, (myocardial infarction, atrial fibrillation), smoking;
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- demographic: age, education;
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- genetic
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- factors related to the stroke, (localization of the lesions, the type of stroke, the type of the cerebral lesions);
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- the presence of certain factors that can lead to chronic cerebral hypoperfusion and ischemic events, (heart arrhythmias, heart diseases, or the congestive heart failure, etc).
Diabetes Mellitus
The age and the arterial hypertension
The metabolic syndrome
Smoking
Alcohol
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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© 2018 by the authors. 2018 Carmen V. Albu, Vlad Pădureanu, Mihail V. Boldeanu, Ana M. Bumbea, Anca Ş. Enescu, Dana M. Albulescu, Cristian A. Siloși, Aurelia Enescu
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Albu, C.V.; Pădureanu, V.; Boldeanu, M.V.; Bumbea, A.M.; Enescu, A.Ş.; Albulescu, D.M.; Siloși, C.A.; Enescu, A. Vascular Neurocognitive Disorders and the Vascular Risk Factors. J. Mind Med. Sci. 2018, 5, 7-15. https://doi.org/10.22543/7674.51.P715
Albu CV, Pădureanu V, Boldeanu MV, Bumbea AM, Enescu AŞ, Albulescu DM, Siloși CA, Enescu A. Vascular Neurocognitive Disorders and the Vascular Risk Factors. Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences. 2018; 5(1):7-15. https://doi.org/10.22543/7674.51.P715
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlbu, Carmen V., Vlad Pădureanu, Mihail V. Boldeanu, Ana M. Bumbea, Anca Ş. Enescu, Dana M. Albulescu, Cristian A. Siloși, and Aurelia Enescu. 2018. "Vascular Neurocognitive Disorders and the Vascular Risk Factors" Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences 5, no. 1: 7-15. https://doi.org/10.22543/7674.51.P715
APA StyleAlbu, C. V., Pădureanu, V., Boldeanu, M. V., Bumbea, A. M., Enescu, A. Ş., Albulescu, D. M., Siloși, C. A., & Enescu, A. (2018). Vascular Neurocognitive Disorders and the Vascular Risk Factors. Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences, 5(1), 7-15. https://doi.org/10.22543/7674.51.P715