Strategic Subcortical Hyperintensities in Cholinergic Pathways and Executive Function Decline in Treated Alzheimer Patients
Open Access
- 1 February 2007
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 64 (2) , 266-272
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.64.2.266
Abstract
Objective To investigate changes in cognition, function, and behavior after 1 year in patients with Alzheimer disease being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors, in relation to the presence or absence of subcortical hyperintensities involving the cholinergic pathways. Design One-year prospective cohort study. Setting Memory Clinic, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto. Patients Ninety patients with possible/probable Alzheimer disease who were being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors at baseline. Interventions Yearly standardized neuropsychological testing and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The Cholinergic Pathways Hyperintensities Scale (CHIPS) was applied to baseline MRIs to rate the severity of subcortical hyperintensities in cholinergic pathways. The consensus-derived Age-Related White Matter Changes (ARWMC) Rating Scale was used as a general measure of white matter disease burden. Main Outcome Measures Tests of global cognition, function, and behavior and specific cognitive and functional domains. Results Patients in the low CHIPS group were equivalent to those in the high CHIPS group with regard to baseline demographic characteristics, cognitive severity, and vascular risk factors. After covarying age and education, no differences were found after 1 year in overall cognition, function, and behavior or on memory, language, and visuospatial tasks. Patients in the high CHIPS group showed improvement on executive function and working memory tasks compared with those in the low CHIPS group. For the ARWMC scale, groups with and without white matter abnormalities were equivalent on baseline demographics and in cognitive, functional, and behavioral outcomes. Conclusion Cerebrovascular compromise of the cholinergic pathways may be a factor that contributes more selectively than does total white matter lesion burden to response to cholinergic therapy in Alzheimer disease, particularly on frontal/executive tasks.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- A New Visual Rating Scale to Assess Strategic White Matter Hyperintensities Within Cholinergic Pathways in DementiaStroke, 2005
- Loss of Cholinergic Pathways in Vascular Dementia of the Binswanger TypeDementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders, 2005
- Treatment of vascular dementia—evidence from clinical trials with cholinesterase inhibitorsJournal of the Neurological Sciences, 2004
- Different patterns of N-acetylaspartate loss in subcortical ischemic vascular dementia and ADNeurology, 2003
- Operational Definitions for the NINDS-AIREN Criteria for Vascular DementiaStroke, 2003
- Cholinergic denervation in a pure multi-infarct stateNeurology, 2003
- A New Rating Scale for Age-Related White Matter Changes Applicable to MRI and CTStroke, 2001
- Impact of White Matter Changes on Clinical Manifestation of Alzheimer’s DiseaseStroke, 2000
- Trajectories of cholinergic pathways within the cerebral hemispheres of the human brainBrain, 1998
- Neuropsychological assessment.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1995