Cerebral Microbleeds Are Associated with Loss of White Matter Integrity.

AJNR Am J Neuroradiol

From the Departments of Neurology (J.-Y.L., Y.-J.Z., F.-F.Z., F.H., L.-X.Z., J.N., M.Y., L.C., Y.-C.Z.), Radiology (Z.J.), and Cardiology (S.Z.), Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Peking Union Medical College and Chinese Academy of Medical Science, Beijing, China.

Published: August 2020

Background And Purpose: Previous studies have shown that diffusion tensor imaging suggests a diffuse loss of white matter integrity in people with white matter hyperintensities or lacunes. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the presence of cerebral microbleeds and their distribution are related to the integrity of white matter microstructures.

Materials And Methods: The study comprised 982 participants who underwent brain MR imaging to determine microbleed status. The cross-sectional relation between microbleeds and the microstructural integrity of the white matter was assessed by 2 statistical methods: a multilinear regression model based on the average DTI parameters of normal-appearing white matter and Tract-Based Spatial Statistics analysis, a tract-based voxelwise analysis. Fiber tractography was used to spatially describe the microstructural abnormalities along WM tracts containing a cerebral microbleed.

Results: The presence of cerebral microbleeds was associated with lower mean fractional anisotropy and higher mean diffusivity, axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity, and the association remained when cardiovascular risk factors and cerebral small-vessel disease markers were further adjusted. Tract-Based Spatial Statistics analysis indicated strictly lobar cerebral microbleeds associated with lower fractional anisotropy, higher mean diffusivity, and higher radial diffusivity in the internal capsule and corpus callosum after adjusting other cerebral small-vessel disease markers, while only a few voxels remained associated with deep cerebral microbleeds. Diffusion abnormalities gradients along WM tracts containing a cerebral microbleed were not found in fiber tractography analysis.

Conclusions: Cerebral microbleeds are associated with widely distributed changes in white matter, despite their focal appearance on SWI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7658876PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6622DOI Listing

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