Refereed journal article or data article (A1)

Cognitive Effects of White Matter Pathology in Normal and Pathological Aging




List of AuthorsKaskikallio A., Karrasch M., Rinne J.O., Tuokkola T., Parkkola R., Grönholm-Nyman P.

PublisherIOS PRESS

Publication year2019

JournalJournal of Alzheimer's Disease

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE

Journal acronymJ ALZHEIMERS DIS

Volume number67

Issue number2

Start page489

End page493

Number of pages5

ISSN1387-2877

DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-180554

URLhttps://content.iospress.com/articles/journal-of-alzheimers-disease/jad180554

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/39535018


Abstract
We examined whether cerebrovascular white matter pathology is related to cognition as measured by the compound score of CERAD neuropsychological battery in cognitively normal older adults, patients with mild cognitive impairment, and patients with Alzheimer's disease (total n = 149), controlling for age and education. Trend-level effects of white matter pathology on cognition were only observed in patients with Alzheimer's disease (p = 0.062, eta(2) = 0.052), patients with severe frontal white matter pathology performed notably worse than those with milder pathology. This indicates that frontal cerebrovascular pathology may have an additive negative effect on cognition in Alzheimer's disease.

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Last updated on 2022-07-04 at 17:16