BACKGROUND: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), a cerebral small vessel disease characterized by vascular amyloid deposition, presents with heterogeneous imaging features, but the biological mechanisms underlying hemorrhagic markers remain unclear. We assessed hemorrhage patterns in CAA to determine their associations with amyloid burden and related imaging markers. METHODS: Sixty-two patients with probable CAA underwent Pittsburgh compound B-positron emission tomography and structural magnetic resonance imaging. Participants were classified by dominant hemorrhagic pattern: lobar cerebral microbleed-dominant (n=31), cortical superficial siderosis-dominant (n=17), and nondominant (n=14). Global cortical amyloid burden was quantified as Pittsburgh compound B distribution volume ratio. White matter hyperintensity volume and high-degree centrum semiovale-enlarged perivascular spaces were assessed. Associations were tested using age- and sex-adjusted regression models. RESULTS: =0.049). Findings were unchanged in sensitivity analyses, adjusting for intracerebral hemorrhage. CONCLUSIONS: Amyloid burden in CAA is associated with hemorrhage-dominant patterns, high-degree centrum semiovale-enlarged perivascular spaces, and greater WMH volume. These findings support a close link between vascular amyloid deposition and downstream vascular brain injury, underscoring its relevance as a therapeutic target in CAA.
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Gokcal et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fa1bfa21ec5bbf08202 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.125.048858
Elif Gokcal
J. Alex Becker
Mitchell J. Horn
Journal of the American Heart Association
Harvard University
Yale University
Massachusetts General Hospital
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