AI Article Synopsis

  • * The disease often progresses without obvious symptoms in the early stages, making early diagnosis crucial to improve patient outcomes and management.
  • * This article reviews advanced neuroimaging techniques, specifically Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), to enhance the understanding of CSVD, its microstructural impacts, and to highlight new research directions for better diagnosis and treatment.

Article Abstract

Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) is a syndrome of pathology, imaging, and clinical manifestations caused primarily by a variety of functional or structural lesions in the small blood vessels of the brain. CSVD contributes to approximately 45% of dementia and 25% of ischemic strokes worldwide and is one of the most important causes of disability. The disease progresses insidiously, and patients often have no typical symptoms in the early stages, but have an increased risk of stroke, death, and poor long-term prognosis. Therefore, early diagnosis of CSVD is particularly important. Neuroimaging is the most important diagnostic tool used for CSVD. Therefore, it is important to explore the imaging mechanisms of CSVD for its early diagnosis and precise treatment. In this article, we review the principles and analysis methods of DTI, analyze the latest DTI studies on CSVD, clarify the disease-lesion mapping relationships between cerebral white matter (WM) microstructural damage and CSVD, explore the pathogenic mechanisms and preclinical imaging features of CSVD, and summarize the latest research directions of CSVD and research methods to provide a comprehensive and objective imaging basis for the diagnosis and treatment of CSVD.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11521969PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2024.1473462DOI Listing

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