@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
1/Having trouble remembering what you should look for in vascular dementia on imaging? Almost everyone worked up for dementia has infarcts. Which ones are important? Here’s a thread on the key findings in vascular dementia!
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
2/Vascular cognitive impairment, or its most serious form, vascular dementia, used to be called multi-infarct dementia. It was thought dementia directly resulted from brain volume loss from infarcts, w/the thought that 50-100cc of infarcted related volume loss caused dementia
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
3/But that’s now outdated. We now know vascular dementia results from diverse pathologies that all share a common vascular origin. It’s possible to lose little volume from infarct & still result in dementia. So if infarcts are common—which contribute to vascular dementia?
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
4/To understand which findings are key in vascular dementia, think of a vascular insult to the brain like a punch Just as each punch does damage, so does each infarct Not all punches are equal—nor is every infarct as devastating--& both infarcts & punches are cumulative
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
5/So every if every punch/infarct causes injury, think of dementia as a knock out—enough damage to overwhelm the brain so that it out of the fight. The same injuries that cause a knock out are the same ones that can cause vascular dementia. So how do you knock someone out?
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
6/Classic way is to just beat the daylights out of them. It’s how most fights ends—if there is enough damage, they just can’t stand. This is multi-infarct dementia, but it’s thought of bit differently than it was in the old days Volume makes an impact, but it’s not everything
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
7/It’s like a machine gun shooting at target. You don’t need good aim, eventually something’s going to hit something important enough to take it down The new concept of multi-infarct dementia is that it’s not volume per se, but enough volume eventually hits something important
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
8/We used to think that dementia was a direct relationship w/volume lost, but some infarcts are more impactful than others. But if you have enough infarcts, you will eventually have impactful ones. So the overall severity of infarcts does still matter.
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
9/Next way to take someone down? The chokehold--hypoperfusion. Signs of hypoperfusion on imaging are infarcts in the borderzone or watershed distributions. This is typically from a large (ICA) or medium (MCA) stenosis or occlusion.
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
10/But it’s not just these infarcts that cause dementia. They are just a sign of the underlying disease. If there is hypoperfusion, there isn’t just macro hypoperfusion, but also chronic neuronal hypoperfusion at a cellular level that causes damage, dysfunction & dementia
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
11/But we can’t see the damage on a cellular level. We can only see the macroscopic signs on imaging—borderzone infarcts. Remember the major vascular territories are shaped like a butterfly—infarcts at the butterfly junction are borderzone. These indicate hypoperfusion
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
12/Next way to take someone down? A knock out punch. A one & done. These are strategic infarcts. These are infarcts located in structures directly related to cognition. So damage to these structures results in dementia without any other significant volume loss.
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
13/Now, rather than shooting a machine gun at a target, you a like a ninja. Just one shot right to the heart to take it down. Just one infarct in one of these important structures can cause dementia like a shot to the heart. So which structures are these?
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
14/There are many structures that have been implicated in strategic infarct dementia. But the main ones are hippocampus, internal capsule (ant & genu), thalamus (paramedian) & caudate. I remember this w/the mnemonic: One HIT CAUses dementia
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
15/Next way to take someone down? Break important connections. Breaking a leg means they ain’t getting up. Same w/infarcts, small vessel disease or subcortical vascular encephalopathy breaks important white matter connections between parts of the brain so they can’t function
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
16/These small vessel infarcts disrupt connections between the frontal lobe & deep gray & parietal lobe, resulting in decreased executive function, attention & memory. The more small vessel disease, the more impact. So always comment on the severity of small vessel disease
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
17/The final way to take someone down? Play dirty & make them bleed—hemorrhagic infarcts. These are a sign of both hypertensive & amyloid small vessel disease. Amyloid angiopathy has a very strong correlation w/dementia
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
18/In fact, amyloid angiopathy has such a strong correlation w/dementia that some say it should be thought of more as a neurodegenerative disorder that occasionally causes hemorrhage/stroke—neurodegeneration is its day job.
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
19/It causes both neurodegeneration & stroke by build up of amyloid proteins in the vessel wall & surrounding perivascular space. In the vessel wall, it causes weakening that can lead to rupture & hemorrhage In the perivascular space, it causes clogging & decreased clearance
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
20/It’s like having a bathtub you never clean Perivascular spaces get clogged like a drain leading to clouded water (dementia). And stagnant water is bad for the pipes so they rust & burst—just like vessels hemorrhage So always mention microhemorrhage/signs of amyloid
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
21/So now you know the important signs to look for when you are reading a study for vascular dementia. You now can make all the findings so your report is a knock out!
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@nirmalregency
Nirmal Pandey MD DM Neurologist
2 years
@teachplaygrub One more pearl in your crown. Just keep them glittering. And shining. And polished. Salute.
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@nirmalregency Thank you, as always!! I read so many of these dementia studies—and everyone always focuses on volume the hippocampus, but vascular lesions are such an important contributor to dementia!
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@doctor_radio78
Dr Santosh
2 years
@teachplaygrub Wow as usual amazing explanation multi infarct dementia so common in elderly. Thank u ma’am 🙏
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@doctor_radio78 Thank you as always!! Your support is so appreciated!
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@RiskyDR_14
Risky Doctor!
2 years
@teachplaygrub At 4 am I am compelled to read your thread. You are so good in explaining neuro radiology. Big fan
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@RiskyDR_14 Thank you!! You are too kind! Hopefully you still got enough sleep! I will do my best to continue to make content that is worthy of being read in the wee hours of the morning!!
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@sfakhran77
saeed fakhran
2 years
@teachplaygrub Another great post!
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@sfakhran77 Thank you!! I was reading a lot of these studies so I really want to get a check list down of what to look for. This is how I taught it to myself!
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@AmyJohn50874035
Amy Johnson
2 years
@teachplaygrub love this one. so helpful on such a common topic
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@AmyJohn50874035 Thank you! Glad you like it! I think every practice reads a ton of these studies—afterall, dementia eventually gets us all! So it’s important to know what to look for
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@Ivica76726403
Ivica
2 years
@teachplaygrub This is unbeleivably great! Thank you
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@teachplaygrub
Lea Alhilali, MD
2 years
@Ivica76726403 Thank you!! So glad you liked it! This is actually how I taught myself to remember it 😆
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@sciqst
Raffaele Di Giacomo, PhD
2 years
@teachplaygrub This is an insightful thread, Lea. Key findings in vascular dementia on imaging often include multiple cortical and subcortical infarcts, white matter lesions, and microinfarcts. For anyone diving deeper into biomedical questions or needing detailed reviews generated by AI, check
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@MauritusM
Mauritus Maceiras
2 years
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