Objectives Factors accelerating cerebral degenerative changes represent potentially modifiable risks for cognitive decline. Putative risk factors accelerating subtle cognitive decline and dementia were correlated with repeated measures of cerebral atrophy, CT densitometry, perfusions and cognitive testing among neurologically and cognitively normative ageing volunteers. Methods Two hundred and twenty‐four normative subjects at increased risk for cognitive decline were admitted to the study. Mean entry age was 59.5±15.8 years. Mean follow‐up is 4.3±3.1 years. At follow‐up, 22 developed subtle cognitive decline (δCCSE≥−3), 19 became demented, eight with vascular type (VAD) and 11 with Alzheimer's type (DAT) and 183 remain cognitively unchanged. Standardized questionnaires, medical, neuropsychological, neurological and blood work examinations were obtained. Cerebral atrophy, tissue densities and perfusions were measured by xenon‐enhanced CT. Results After age 60, cerebral atrophy, ventricular enlargement, polio‐ and leuko‐araiosis geometrically increased as perfusions declined. Risk factors accelerating perfusional decline, cerebral atrophy, polio‐araiosis and leuko‐araiosis (thinning of grey–white matter densities) were: transient ischaemic attacks (TIAs), hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidemia, male gender. At age 71.5±11.9, subtle cognitive decline began, accelerated by TIAs, hypertension and heart disease. Leuko‐araiosis began before cognitive decline. TIAs, hypertension and hyperlipidemia correlated with VAD. Excessive cortical perfusional decreases and cerebral atrophy correlated with cognitive decline. Family history of neurodegenerative disease correlated with DAT. Conclusion TIAs, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, smoking and male gender accelerate cerebral degenerative changes, cognitive decline and dementia. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Vascular dementia (VAD) is considered to be the second most common cause of dementia in Europe and the US. In Asia and many developing countries, it is more common than dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT). VAD is the most preventable form of dementia associated with later life. The pathogenesis of VAD is multifactorial, and it represents a heterogeneous, not a homogeneous, clinical entity. Classification of VAD by pathogenesis is important for its prevention and treatment. Control of the risk factors for VAD reduces its incidence and stabilises or improves cognitive performance following stroke. Proper diagnostic evaluation of VAD requires: (i) a well defined quantitative assessment of the cognitive deficits present; (ii) assessment of risk factors for stroke; (iii) identification of cerebral vascular lesions by history, neurological examination and neuroimaging; (iv) exclusion of other causes of dementia; (v) establishment of a positive diagnosis of possible, probable or definite VAD versus DAT or mixed VAD/DAT; and (vi) identification of the temporal relationship between cognitive deficits and cerebral vascular lesions. VAD can be subdivided into 8 major types, as follows: (i) multi-infarct dementia secondary to large cerebral emboli [type 1]; (ii) strategically placed infarctions causing dementia [type 2]; (iii) multiple subcortical lacunar lesions secondary to atherosclerosis or degenerative arteriolar changes [type 3]; (iv) Binswanger's disease (arteriosclerotic subcortical leukoencephalopathy) [type 4]; (v) mixtures of types 1, 2 and 3 [type 5]; (vi) haemorrhagic lesions causing dementia [type 6]; (vii) subcortical dementia secondary to hereditary factors (type 7); and (viii) mixtures of DAT and VAD (type 8). Treatment is dictated by the pathogenetic subtype of VAD that is present.
Chronic daily headaches (CDH) consist of episodes of head pain occurring daily; more than 15 days each month; often associated with a history of migraine, with or without aura; or with a history of tension-type headaches occurring alone or both occurring together. Chronic daily headaches are frequently associated with rebound headaches after ergotamine, barbiturate, caffeine, and analgesic abuse. We previously reported that migraineurs with typical intermittent headaches exhibited excessive cerebral cortical vasodilation after oral acetazolamide which usually precipitated and reproduced their typical headaches. In the present study, cerebral vasodilator responses were tested by measuring changes in local cerebral blood flow (Delta LCBF) utilizing xenon-contrasted CT scanning, before and after oral administration of 14.3 mg/kg of acetazolamide, in 11 patients with CDH. The results were compared with 12 age-matched typical migraineurs, with and without aura, who had a history of migraine attacks occurring at intervals of 1 month or longer. Global and subcortical gray and white matter Delta LCBFs were quantitated and compared between both groups. After acetazolamide, Delta LCBF increased in cortical gray matter by 11.8% among patients with CDH and by 16.7% among migraineurs, with no significant differences between groups. Typical migraine attacks were provoked by acetazolamide in 9 patients (82%) with CDH and in 11 (92%) migraineurs with intermittent headaches. These observations are taken as evidence that at least 82% of patients with CDH have transformed migraine as judged by the provocation by acetazolamide of typical migraine attacks associated with excessive Delta LCBF increases. Serotonin agonists should be considered in the treatment of CDH to avoid ergotamine, caffeine, barbiturate, and analgesic abuse.
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