151 research outputs found

    Imaging of Age-related Brain Changes: A Population-based Approach

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    The objective of the studies described in this thesis was to investigate with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain changes that may function as preclinical imaging markers for neurodegenerative and cerebrovascular disease. For this goal, advanced MRI techniques were applied in the Rotterdam Scan Study, a large population-based brain imaging study among middle-aged and elderly persons. We studied the prevalence and distribution of age-related brain changes on MRI, investigated associated risk factors and related these brain changes to cognitive functioning. We found that cerebral microbleeds were present in 1 in 5 persons over age of 60. This prevalence is much higher than reported previously, which in part may be explained by the use of a more sensitive MRI sequence. Furthermore, we showed that risk factors for microbleeds varied according to the location of microbleeds in the brain. By measuring cerebral blood flow, we assessed that persons with low total brain perfusion had significantly more white matter lesions compared to those with high total brain perfusion. This suggests that tissue hypoperfusion may contribute to white matter lesion pathogenesis. Microstructural integrity within white matter lesions or normal-appearing white matter was associated with cognitive function, even when taking into account volume of white matter lesions and white matter atrophy. This indicates that the deleterious effect of white matter changes on cognition not only depends on lesion burden or amount of atrophy, but also on characteristics that are not easily evaluated by conventional MRI. The studies described in this thesis have identified several age-related brain changes that have potential to serve as imaging markers for neurodegenerative or cerebrovascular disease

    Cerebral microbleeds: Spatial distribution implications

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    Cerebral microbleeds are considered an imaging marker of cerebral small vessel disease. The location of microbleeds is thought to reflect the underlying pathology. Microbleeds in the deep and infratentorial region are thought to reflect hypertensive arteriopathy whereas lobar microbleeds are associated clinically with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). Aside from patient populations, microbleeds are frequently observed in seemingly asymptomatic populations. Moreover, many elderly, both in clinical and preclinical populations, have multiple coexisting pathologies in their brains, which complicates the interpretation of cerebral microbleeds, especially early in the clinical course. In this commentary, we discuss the influence of the strongest genetic risk factor for CAA, Apolipoprotein E (APOE), in the spatial distribution of microbleeds, and we additionally address issues in interpretation and implication of the location of microbleeds in clinical and asymptomatic populations

    Brain aging: more of the same!?

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    Cortical gyrification in relation to age and cognition in older adults

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    Gyrification of the cerebral cortex changes with aging and relates to development of cognitive function during early life and midlife. Little is known about how gyrification relates to age and cognitive function later in life. We investigated this in 4397 individuals (mean age: 63.5 years, range: 45.7 to 97.9) from the Rotterdam Study, a population-based cohort. Global and local gyrification were assessed from T1-weighted images. A measure for global cognition, the g-factor, was calculated from five cognitive tests. Older age was associated with lower gyrification (mean difference per year ​= ​−0.0021; 95% confidence interval ​= ​−0.0025; −0.0017). Non-linear terms did not improve the models. Age related to lower gyrification in the parietal, frontal, temporal and occipital regions, and higher gyrification in the medial prefrontal cortex. Higher levels of the g-factor were associated with higher global gyrification (mean difference per g-factor unit ​= ​0.0044; 95% confidence interval ​= ​0.0015; 0.0073). Age and the g-factor did not interact in relation to gyrification (p ​> ​0.05). The g-factor bilaterally associated with gyrification in three distinct clusters. The first cluster encompassed the superior temporal gyrus, the insular cortex and the postcentral gyrus, the second cluster the lingual gyrus and the precuneus, and the third cluster the orbitofrontal cortex. These clusters largely remained statistically significant after correction for cortical surface area. Overall, the results support the notion that gyrification varies with aging and cognition during and after midlife, and suggest that gyrification is a potential marker for age-related brain and co

    Implementation and validation of ASL perfusion measurements for population imaging

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    Purpose: Pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL) allows for noninvasive measurement of regional cerebral blood flow (CBF), which has the potential to serve as biomarker for neurodegenerative and cardiovascular diseases. This work aimed to implement and validate pCASL on the dedicated MRI system within the population-based Rotterdam Study, which was installed in 2005 and for which software and hardware configurations have remained fixed. Methods: Imaging was performed on two 1.5T MRI systems (General Electric); (I) the Rotterdam Study system, and (II) a hospital-based system with a product pCASL sequence. An in-house implementation of pCASL was created on scanner I. A flow phantom and three healthy volunteers (<27 years) were scanned on both systems for validation purposes. The data of the first 30 participants (86 ± 4 years) of the Rotterdam Study undergoing pCASL scans on scanner I only were analyzed with and without partial volume correction for gray matter. Results: The validation study showed a difference in blood flow velocity, sensitivity, and spatial coefficient of variation of the perfusion-weighted signal between the two scanners, which was accounted for during post-processing. Gray matter CBF for the Rotterdam Study participants was 52.4 ± 8.2 ml/100 g/min, uncorrected for partial volume effects of gray matter. In this elderly cohort, partial volume correction for gray matter had a variable effect on measured CBF in a range of cortical and sub-cortical regions of interest. Conclusion: Regional CBF measurements are now included to investigate novel biomarkers in the Rotterdam Study. This work highlights that when it is not feasible to purchase a novel ASL sequence, an in-house implementation is valuable

    Liver Fat and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors Among School-Age Children

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    BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is a major risk factor for cardiometabolic disease in adults. The burden of liver fat and associated cardiometabolic risk factors in healthy children is unknown. In a

    Trajectories of imaging markers in brain aging: the Rotterdam Study

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    With aging, the brain undergoes several structural changes. These changes reflect the normal aging process and are therefore not necessarily pathologic. In fact, better understanding of these normal changes is an important cornerstone to also disentangle pathologic changes. Several studies have investigated normal brain aging, both cross-sectional and longitudinal, and focused on a broad range of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) markers. This study aims to comprise the different aspects in brain aging, by performing

    Application of an Imaging-Based Sum Score for Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy to the General Population: Risk of Major Neurological Diseases and Mortality

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    Objective: To assess the relation between a sum score of imaging markers indicative of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and cognitive impairment, stroke, dementia, and mortality in a general population. Methods: One thousand six hundred twenty-two stroke-free and dementia-free participants of the population-based Rotterdam Study (mean age 73.1 years, 54.3% women) underwent brain MRI (1.5 tesla) in 2005–2011 and were followed for stroke, dementia and death until 2016–2017. Four MRI markers (strictly lobar cerebral microbleeds, cortical superficial siderosis, centrum semiovale perivascular spaces, and white matter hyperintensities) were combined to construct the CAA sum score, ranging from 0 to 4. Neuropsychological testing measured during the research visit closest to scan date were used to assess general cognitive function and cognitive domains. The associations of the CAA sum score with cognition cross-sectionally and with stroke, dementia, and mortality longitudinally were determined using linear regression and Cox proportional hazard modeling adjusted for age, sex, hypertension, cholesterol, lipid lowering medication, atrial fibrillation, antithrombotic medication and APOE-ε2/ε4 carriership. Additionally, we accounted for competing risks of death due to other causes for stroke and dementia, and calculated absolute risk estimates. Results: During a mean follow-up of 7.2 years, 62 participants suffered a stroke, 77 developed dementia and 298 died. Participants with a CAA score of 1 showed a lower Mini-Mental-State-Exam (fully-adjusted mean difference −0.21, 9
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