Pathomechanisms Behind Cognitive Disorders Following Ruptured Anterior Communicating Aneurysms: A Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study
Abstract
Introduction
After the rupture of anterior communicating aneurysms, most patients experience debilitating cognitive disorders; and sometimes even without showing morphological anomaly on MRI examinations. Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) may help understanding the pathomechanisms leading to such disorders in this subset of patients.
Methods
After independent assessment, we constituted a population of patients with normal morphological imaging (ACOM group). Then, a case-control study comparing volumetric and voxel-based DTI parameters between the ACOM group and a control population was performed. All patients underwent the full imaging and neuropsychological assessments at 6 months after the aneurysm rupture. Results were considered significant when p<2.02.10−4.
Results
Twelve patients were included in the ACOM group: 75% had at least one disabled cognitive domain. Significant differences in DTI parameters of global white matter were noted (average Fractional Anisotropy: 0.915 [±0.05] in ACOM group versus 0.943 (±0.03); p=1.10−5) and in frontal white matter tracts (superior fronto-occipital fasciculus and anterior parts of the corona radiata) as well as in the fornix.
Conclusion
Cognitive disorders are under-estimated, and DTI confirmed that, even when conventional MRI examinations were normal, there were still signs of diffuse neuronal injuries that seemed to dominate in frontal areas, close to the site of rupture.
Domains
Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]
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