Association of white matter hyperintensities, white matter microstructural changes, hippocampal and amygdala volumes with neuropathology in a community cohort using 7T postmortem in situ MRI

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

We integrate visual and quantitative metrics in white matter and medial temporal lobe to examine relationships with neuropathology in a community cohort.

METHODS

Postmortem in situ MRI (T1, T2, DWI) was performed in 25 human brains, followed by visual ratings (Fazekas, MTA, ERICA, Koedam). Neuropathology included ADNC, LATE-NC, hippocampal sclerosis, PART, ARTAG, Lewy pathology, and CAA.

RESULTS

Increased Fazekas score was linked to aging, lower education, hypertension, higher basilar artery wall thickness, and greater Braak NFT stage. WMH volume also correlated with lacunes, Thal phase, and CERAD score that was not observed using Fazekas. Hippocampal volumes were lower in elderly, less educated people and were associated with higher atrophy scores and higher Braak NFT stage. Higher amygdala volume was only associated with higher CERAD score.

DISCUSSION

Quantitative MRI may detect neuropathologic associations more sensitively than visual ratings. Tau pathology is a key predictor of WMH burden and hippocampal atrophy.

Article activity feed