The association between frailty and MRI features of cerebral small vessel disease
Authors
Kant, Ilse M. J.
van Montfort, Simone J. T.
Jaarsma-Coes, Myriam G.
Witkamp, Theodoor D.
Winterer, Georg
Hendrikse, Jeroen
Slooter, Arjen J. C.
Armbruster, Franz Paul
Böcher, Axel
Boraschi, Diana
Borchers, Friedrich
Della Camera, Giacomo
van Dellen, Edwin
Diehl, Ina
Dschietzig, Thomas Bernd
Feinkohl, Insa
Fillmer, Ariane
Gallinat, Jürgen
Hafen, Bettina
Hartmann, Katarina
Heidtke, Karsten
Helmschrodt, Anja
Italiani, Paola
Ittermann, Bernd
Krause, Roland
Kronabel, Marion
Kühn, Simone
Lachmann, Gunnar
Melillo, Daniela
Menon, David K.
Moreno-López, Laura
Mörgeli, Rudolf
Nürnberg, Peter
Ofosu, Kwaku
Olbert, Maria
Pietzsch, Malte
Pischon, Tobias
Preller, Jacobus
Ruppert, Jana
Schneider, Reinhard
Stamatakis, Emmanuel A.
Weber, Simon
Weyer, Marius
Winzeck, Stefan
Wolf, Alissa
Yürek, Fatima
Zacharias, Norman
Publication Date
2019-08-05Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Volume
9
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Kant, I. M. J., Mutsaerts, H. J. M. M., van Montfort, S. J. T., Jaarsma-Coes, M. G., Witkamp, T. D., Winterer, G., Spies, C. D., et al. (2019). The association between frailty and MRI features of cerebral small vessel disease. Scientific Reports, 9 (1)https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-47731-2
Abstract
Abstract: Frailty is a common syndrome in older individuals that is associated with poor cognitive outcome. The underlying brain correlates of frailty are unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between frailty and MRI features of cerebral small vessel disease in a group of non-demented older individuals. We included 170 participants who were classified as frail (n = 30), pre-frail (n = 85) or non-frail (n = 55). The association of frailty and white matter hyperintensity volume and shape features, lacunar infarcts and cerebral perfusion was investigated by regression analyses adjusted for age and sex. Frail and pre-frail participants were older, more often female and showed higher white matter hyperintensity volume (0.69 [95%-CI 0.08 to 1.31], p = 0.03 respectively 0.43 [95%-CI: 0.04 to 0.82], p = 0.03) compared to non-frail participants. Frail participants showed a non-significant trend, and pre-frail participants showed a more complex shape of white matter hyperintensities (concavity index: 0.04 [95%-CI: 0.03 to 0.08], p = 0.03; fractal dimensions: 0.07 [95%-CI: 0.00 to 0.15], p = 0.05) compared to non-frail participants. No between group differences were found in gray matter perfusion or in the presence of lacunar infarcts. In conclusion, increased white matter hyperintensity volume and a more complex white matter hyperintensity shape may be structural brain correlates of the frailty phenotype.
Keywords
Article, /692/700/1518, /692/698/1688/64, /692/617/375/1370, /692/308/409, /123, article
Identifiers
s41598-019-47731-2, 47731
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-47731-2
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/308763
Rights
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/