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Small vessel disease pathological changes in neurodegenerative and vascular dementias concomitant with autonomic dysfunction

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posted on 2025-08-01, 07:00 authored by Y Hase, TM Polvikoski, MJ Firbank, LJL Craggs, E Hawthorne, C Platten, W Stevenson, V Deramecourt, C Ballard, RA Kenny, RH Perry, P Ince, RO Carare, LM Allan, K Horsburgh, RN Kalaria
We performed a clinicopathological study to assess the burden of small vessel disease (SVD) type of pathological changes in elderly demented subjects, who had clinical evidence of autonomic dysfunction, either carotid sinus hypersensitivity or orthostatic hypotension or both or had exhibited unexpected repeated falls. Clinical and neuropathological diagnoses in 112 demented subjects comprised dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), Parkinson's disease with dementia (PDD), Alzheimer's disease (AD), Mixed dementia (mostly AD‐DLB) and vascular dementia (VaD). Of these, 12 DLB subjects had no recorded unexpected falls in life and therefore no evidence of concomitant autonomic dysfunction. A further 17 subjects were assessed as aging controls without significant pathology or signs of autonomic dysfunction. We quantified brain vascular pathological changes and determined severities of neurodegenerative lesions including α‐synuclein pathology. We found moderate‐severe vascular changes and high‐vascular pathology scores (P < 0.01) in all neurodegenerative dementias and as expected in VaD compared to similar age controls. Arteriolosclerosis, perivascular spacing and microinfarcts were frequent in the basal ganglia and frontal white matter (WM) across all dementias, whereas small infarcts (<5 mm) were restricted to VaD. In a sub‐set of demented subjects, we found that vascular pathology scores were correlated with WM hyperintensity volumes determined by MRI in life (P < 0.02). Sclerotic index values were increased by ~50% in both the WM and neocortex in all dementias compared to similar age controls. We found no evidence for increased α‐synuclein deposition in subjects with autonomic dysfunction. Our findings suggest greater SVD pathological changes occur in the elderly diagnosed with neurodegenerative dementias including DLB and who develop autonomic dysfunction. SVD changes may not necessarily manifest in clinically overt symptoms but they likely confound motor or cognitive dysfunction. We propose dysautonomia promotes chronic cerebral hypoperfusion to impact upon aging‐related neurodegenerative disorders and characterize their end‐stage clinical syndromes.

Funding

Alzheimer's Research UK (ARUK)

Alzheimer's Society

G0400074

G0500247

Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation

Medical Research Council (MRC)

PG2013-022

SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation

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© 2019 International Society of Neuropathology

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record Data Availability Statement: All the data we have generated in this study have been included in this paper and are available on request.

Journal

Brain Pathology

Publisher

Wiley / International Society of Neuropathology

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-07-25T10:09:28Z

FOA date

2020-07-28T23:00:00Z

Citation

Published online 29 July 2019

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