Publication | Closed Access
White matter signal abnormalities in normal individuals: correlation with carotid ultrasonography, cerebral blood flow measurements, and cerebrovascular risk factors.
452
Citations
9
References
1988
Year
White MatterCarotid UltrasonographyCerebrovascular DiseaseBrain LesionMagnetic Resonance ImagingNeurovascular DiseaseBlood FlowStrokeVascular ImagingNeurologyPublic HealthAtherosclerosisNormal IndividualsRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingVascular DementiaNeuroimagingCerebrovascular Risk FactorsCerebral Blood FlowEpidemiologyCardiovascular DiseaseVascular Cognitive DisorderDementiaWhite Matter LesionsNeuroscienceMedicine
We studied 52 asymptomatic subjects using magnetic resonance imaging, and we compared age-matched groups (51-70 years old) with and without white matter lesions with respect to carotid ultrasonography, cerebral blood flow (xenon-133 injection), and cerebrovascular risk factors. In the group with white matter signal abnormalities, we noted a higher frequency of extracranial carotid artery disease, a lower mean gray matter blood flow (F1), and a significant reduction (p less than 0.05) in blood flow of the slow-flowing (F2) compartment. Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and cardiac diseases (p less than 0.002) were found more often in this group. Our results indicate that a higher incidence of changes known to be associated with an increased risk for stroke exists in the presence of white matter lesions in normal elderly individuals.
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