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Hemispheric Asymmetry of White Matter Hyperintensity in Association With Lacunar Infarction

Authors :
Kyusik Kang
Kyung Ho Yu
Moon Ku Han
Beom Joon Kim
Dong-Eog Kim
Yong-Jin Cho
Jong-Moo Park
Hyun Wook Nah
Man Seok Park
Joon-Tae Kim
Tai Hwan Park
Byung-Chul Lee
Mi Sun Oh
Keun-Sik Hong
Jae Kwan Cha
Jun Lee
Soo-Hyun Park
Hee-Joon Bae
Soo Joo Lee
Kyung Bok Lee
Eric E. Smith
Sang-Soon Park
Kang Ho Choi
Wi Sun Ryu
Dae-Hyun Kim
Sang Wuk Jeong
Dawid Schellingerhout
Juneyoung Lee
Hee Seung Ahn
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2018.

Abstract

Background White matter hyperintensities ( WMHs ) are commonly asymmetric between hemispheres but for unknown reasons. We investigated asymmetric WMHs associated with lacunar infarcts. Methods and Results A total of 267 consecutive patients with small first‐ever supratentorial infarcts (≤20 mm) were included. None had a relevant vascular stenosis. WMH asymmetry was measured based on the hemispheric difference of a modified Scheltens scale score (≥3 defined as asymmetric). We analyzed the association of the hemispheric WMH asymmetry with old silent lacunar infarcts or acute lacunar infarcts. We compared lesion frequency maps between groups and generated t‐statistics maps. The mean age of patients was 64 years, and 63% were men. Asymmetric WMH was more than 3‐fold as frequent ( P WMHs , an acute lacunar infarct was more likely to be located in the left (versus right) hemisphere (74% versus 26%, P WMHs , an acute lacunar infarct was more likely to be located on the right (versus left) hemisphere (81% versus 19%, P WMHs was associated with acute and silent lacunes on the same side. Conclusions These are the first data to show that asymmetric WMH s are associated with both old silent lacunar infarcts and acute lacunar infarcts ipsilateral to the greatest WMH burden. This suggests that the hemisphere with relatively large WMHs is more vulnerable to ischemia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
7
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd69b3cac65cf29a9c4cf7b88a053468