Microangiopathy underlying mixed-location intracerebral hemorrhages/microbleeds: A PiB-PET study.

Neurology

From the Department of Neurology (H.H.T.), National Taiwan University Hospital Bei-Hu Branch, Taipei; Departments of Neurology (H.H.T., L.-K.T., S.-C.T., J.-S.J.), Medical Imaging (Y.-F.C., B.-C.L.), and Nuclear Medicine (R.-F.Y.), National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei; Department of Neurology (M.P., P.F., M.E.G.), Massachusetts General Hospital Stroke Research Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Graduate Institute of Clinical Medicine (H.H.T.) and Division of Cardiology (C.-Y.H.), Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University College of Medicine and Hospital, Taipei.

Published: February 2019

Objective: To test the hypothesis that patients with concomitant lobar and deep intracerebral hemorrhages/microbleeds (mixed ICH) have predominantly hypertensive small vessel disease (HTN-SVD) rather than cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), using in vivo amyloid imaging.

Methods: Eighty Asian patients with primary ICH without dementia were included in this cross-sectional study. All patients underwent brain MRI and C-Pittsburgh compound B (PiB)-PET imaging. The mean cortical standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) was calculated using cerebellum as reference. Forty-six patients (57.5%) had mixed ICH. Their demographic and clinical profile as well as amyloid deposition patterns were compared to those of 13 patients with CAA-ICH and 21 patients with strictly deep microbleeds and ICH (HTN-ICH).

Results: Patients with mixed ICH were younger (62.8 ± 11.7 vs 73.3 ± 11.9 years in CAA, = 0.006) and showed a higher rate of hypertension than patients with CAA-ICH ( < 0.001). Patients with mixed ICH had lower PiB SUVR than patients with CAA (1.06 [1.01-1.13] vs 1.43 [1.06-1.58], = 0.003). In a multivariable logistic regression model, mixed ICH was associated with hypertension (odds ratio 8.9, 95% confidence interval 1.4-58.4, = 0.02) and lower PiB SUVR (odds ratio 0.03, 95% confidence interval 0.001-0.87, = 0.04) compared to CAA after adjustment for age. Compared to HTN-ICH, mixed ICH showed a similar mean age (62.8 ± 11.7 vs 60.1 ± 14.5 years in HTN-ICH) and risk factor profile (all > 0.1). Furthermore, PiB SUVR did not differ between mixed ICH (values presented above) and HTN-ICH (1.10 [1.00-1.16], = 0.45).

Conclusions: Patients with mixed ICH have much lower amyloid load than patients with CAA-ICH, while being similar to HTN-ICH. Overall, mixed ICH is probably caused by HTN-SVD, an important finding with clinical relevance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6396971PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000006953DOI Listing

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