Characteristics of cognitive impairment in adult asymptomatic moyamoya disease

BMC Neurology - Tập 20 - Trang 1-8 - 2020
Shihao He1, Ran Duan2, Ziqi Liu1, Xun Ye1,2, Li Yuan3, Tian Li3, Cunxin Tan2, Junshi Shao1, Shusen Qin1, Rong Wang1,2,4
1Department of Neurosurgery, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China
2Department of Neurosurgery, Peking University International Hospital, Beijing, China
3State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & IDG/Mc Govern Institute for Brain Research, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
4Center of Stroke, Beijing Institute for Brain Disorders, Beijing, China

Tóm tắt

Cognitive impairment in adult moyamoya disease (MMD) is thought to be the result of ischemic stroke; however, the presence and extent of cognitive decline in asymptomatic patients is unclear. After classification using T2-weighted fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a total of 19 MMD patients with a history of cerebral infarction, 21 asymptomatic MMD patients, and 20 healthy controls matched for age, sex, and years of education were prospectively included in this study. A detailed neuropsychological evaluation of two moyamoya subgroups and normal controls was conducted. Asymptomatic patients showed varying degrees of decline in intelligence (Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices, P = 0.001), spatial imagination (mental rotation, P = 0.014), working memory (verbal working memory-backward digit span, P = 0.011), and computational ability (simple subtraction, P = 0.014; complex subtraction, P < 0.001) compared with normal controls. MMD patients with cerebral infarction had more severe impairment in complex arithmetic (P = 0.027) and word short-term memory (P = 0.01) than those without symptoms. In asymptomatic MMD patients, a variety of cognitive impairment precedes the onset of clinical symptoms such as cerebral infarction, which may be a long-term complication of conservative treatment.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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