Cerebral blood flow in small vessel disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Y. Shi, M. J. Thrippleton, S. D. Makin, I. Marshall, M. I. Geerlings, A. J. de Craen, M. A. van Buchem, J. M. Wardlaw

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213 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

White matter hyperintensities are frequent on neuroimaging of older people and are a key feature of cerebral small vessel disease. They are commonly attributed to chronic hypoperfusion, although whether low cerebral blood flow is cause or effect is unclear. We systematically reviewed studies that assessed cerebral blood flow in small vessel disease patients, performed meta-analysis and sensitivity analysis of potential confounders. Thirty-eight studies (n = 4006) met the inclusion criteria, including four longitudinal and 34 cross-sectional studies. Most cerebral blood flow data were from grey matter. Twenty-four cross-sectional studies (n = 1161) were meta-analysed, showing that cerebral blood flow was lower in subjects with more white matter hyperintensity, globally and in most grey and white matter regions (e.g. mean global cerebral blood flow: standardised mean difference-0.71, 95% CI -1.12, -0.30). These cerebral blood flow differences were attenuated by excluding studies in dementia or that lacked age-matching. Four longitudinal studies (n = 1079) gave differing results, e.g., more baseline white matter hyperintensity predated falling cerebral blood flow (3.9 years, n = 575); cerebral blood flow was low in regions that developed white matter hyperintensity (1.5 years, n = 40). Cerebral blood flow is lower in subjects with more white matter hyperintensity cross-sectionally, but evidence for falling cerebral blood flow predating increasing white matter hyperintensity is conflicting. Future studies should be longitudinal, obtain more white matter data, use better age-correction and stratify by clinical diagnosis.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1653-1667
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Volume36
Issue number10
Early online date5 Aug 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2016

Bibliographical note

Shi, Yulu Thrippleton, Michael J Makin, Stephen D Marshall, Ian Geerlings, Mirjam I de Craen, Anton Jm van Buchem, Mark A Wardlaw, Joanna M eng Meta-Analysis Review 2016/08/09 06:00 J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2016 Oct;36(10):1653-1667. doi: 10.1177/0271678X16662891. Epub 2016 Aug 5.

Keywords

  • Aging/*pathology Blood Flow Velocity/physiology Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases/*diagnostic imaging/pathology/physiopathology Cerebrovascular Circulation/*physiology Dementia/*diagnostic imaging/pathology/physiopathology Gray Matter/blood supply/diagnostic imaging/pathology Humans Magnetic Resonance Angiography Ultrasonography, Doppler White Matter/blood supply/diagnostic imaging/pathology Cerebral blood flow cerebral small vessel disease meta-analysis systematic review white matter hyperintensities

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