Cerebral small vessel disease can be identified using magnetic resonance imaging, and includes white matter hyperintensities, lacunar infarcts, cerebral microbleeds, and brain atrophy. Cerebral small vessel disease and chronic kidney disease share many r
We present a case of a patient suffering with severe OCD whose symptoms disappeared immediately following a small right posterior frontoparietal infarct. We speculate that the lesion modulated the corticalsubcortical circuits, likely through a change in input into in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. ...
junction of the parietal and occipital lobes [102]. CAA categorization heavily relies on intracerebral hemorrhage status to define individual cases as “definite CAA”, “probable CAA with supporting pathological evidence”, “probable CAA”, or “possible CAA” under the modified Boston criteria [111...
J. Chronic cognitive disturbances after a single supratentorial lacunar infarct. Neuropsychiatry Neuropsychol. Behav. Neurol. 14, 98–102 (2001). PubMed Google Scholar Vasquez, B. P. & Zakzanis, K. K. The neuropsychological profile of vascular cognitive impairment not demented: a meta-analysis....
Note the marked atrophy or loss in the cortical-parietal-hippocampal regions (outlined by the yellow dashed lines) in panel (B) as compared to the control in panel (A) at 26-weeks of age and these remodeling changes were associated with a decrease in the brain wet weights upon removal. ...
Compared with the CSVD-n and control groups, the CSVD-c group had one additional hub region in the left superior parietal gyrus (SPG) and lacked the right dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus (SFGdor) and median cingulate gyrus (DCG) as hub regions. In Table 3 and Figure 3, it is shown...