Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Total Small Vessel Disease Score in Neurologically Healthy Japanese Adults in the Kashima Scan Study
Yusuke YakushijiAndreas CharidimouTomoyuki NoguchiMasashi NishiharaMakoto EriguchiYusuke NanriAtsushi KawaguchiTatsumi HirotsuDavid J. WerringHideo Hara
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Supplementary material

2018 Volume 57 Issue 2 Pages 189-196

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Abstract

Objective We explored the association between the total small vessel disease (SVD) score obtained with magnetic resonance imaging and risk factors and outcomes in the Japanese population.

Methods The presence of SVD features, including lacunes, cerebral microbleeds, white matter changes, and basal ganglia perivascular spaces on MRI, was summed to obtain a "total SVD score" (range 0-4). Ordinal and multinomial logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate the association of higher total SVD scores with vascular risk factors, the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score, and cerebral atrophy.

Results We included 1,451 neurologically healthy adults (mean age, 57.1 years; 47% male). A multivariate ordinal logistic regression analysis showed that the total SVD score was associated with aging, hypertension, blood pressure (BP), diabetes mellitus, MMSE score, and deep cerebral atrophy, but the equal slopes assumption between scores did not hold. A multivariate multinomial logistic regression analysis (total SVD score 0=reference) showed that aging, hypertension, and BP were positively associated with scores of 1, 2, or ≥3. These effects, presented as odds ratios (ORs), increased as the score increased and were strongest with a score of ≥3 [aging (per 10-year increment), OR 4.00, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.47-6.46; hypertension, OR 5.68, 95% CI 2.52-12.80; systolic BP (per standard deviation increase), OR 1.96, 95% CI 1.41-2.74, respectively]. Diabetes mellitus and deep cerebral atrophy tended to be associated with the SVD scores. The MMSE score showed no consistent associations.

Conclusion The total SVD score may be a promising tool for indexing SVD, even in the Japanese population.

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© 2018 by The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
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