Executive Function and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Subcortical Hyperintensities in Vascular Dementia
作者:
David Moser,
Ronald Cohen,
Robert Paul,
Jane Paulsen,
Brian Ott,
Norman Gordon,
Sandra Bell,
William Stone,
期刊:
Neuropsychiatry, Neuropsychology & Behavioral Neurology
(OVID Available online 2001)
卷期:
Volume 14,
issue 2
页码: 89-92
ISSN:0894-878X
年代: 2001
出版商: OVID
数据来源: OVID
摘要:
ObjectiveTo determine the relation between subcortical hyperintensities (SHs) visible on magnetic resonance imaging and executive function among patients with vascular dementia.BackgroundThe relation between SHs and executive dysfunction is not well understood, because studies have varied widely in methodology and have produced conflicting results.MethodWe examined the relation between SHs (expressed as a percentage of total brain volume, not including ventricular volume) and six tests of executive function in a well-defined group of 24 individuals with vascular dementia. Executive tests were divided in two groups: Attention/Speed and Abstraction/Problem Solving. Bivariate correlations were computed between individual neuropsychological variables and SHs.ResultsResults showed significant bivariate correlations between SHs and three of the four tests in the Attention/Speed domain. Subcortical hyperintensities shared virtually no association with performance on tests in the Abstraction/Problem-Solving domain.ConclusionsThe finding that SHs are significantly associated with psychomotor slowing and attentional dysfunction is consistent with what is known about the behavioral manifestations of subcortical disease. More detailed investigations of the regional distribution of SHs as well as measures of atrophy, hypoperfusion, and hypometabolism may be necessary to accurately characterize the complex relation between vascular disease and different aspects of executive dysfunction.
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