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Cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) encompasses all pathological processes that affect the small vessels of the brain. On brain-MRI cSVD is characterized by structural brain abnormalities such as white matter lesions (WMLs). Clinically, cSVD is related to acute syndromes as lacunar stroke but also to more chronic health problems such as cognitive decline. Recent literature suggests that a disrupted blood brain barrier (BBB), leading to elevated BBB permeability, may play a pivotal role in the aetiology of cSVD and lacunar stroke. The BBB is a complex system of neuronal, glial and vascular cells which main function is to shield the brain from toxic components and regulate the homeostasis. Elucidating the role of the BBB may have far reaching consequences for the treatment of cSVD patients and the reduction of recurrence rate of the disease. This could lead to a better quality of life among cSVD patients and reduce the economic burden on society. Currently the exact contribution and extent of a possibly defective BBB in cSVD remains largely unclear, due to the lack of a reliable method to accurately quantify the BBB permeability in cSVD patients. As a result, the current treatment consists of treating the cardiovascular risk factors, often with poor results.
Quantification of the BBB permeability provides an objective measure of the integrity of the BBB and as such aids the study of the role of the BBB. The aim of this study is to realize a clinically applicable MRI-method to quantify the BBB permeability. Moreover, the method can be used to study the involvement of BBB disruption in other neuropathologies including Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, hypertension and diabetes.
Primary Study Objective:
To realize a clinically applicable quantification of BBB permeability using DCE-MRI by determining the reproducibility of the DCE-MRI method
Secondary Study Objective:
To achieve the shortest scan duration without compromising the reliability of the BBB permeability quantification.
Hypotheses:
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Inclusion criteria
All subjects:
cSVD patients: - patients who present with a transient ischemic attack (TIA) and cSVD related abnormalities on brain MRI. TIA patients are defined as patients with stroke like symptoms that last no longer than 24 hours. MRI abnormalities include extended white matter lesions, (asymptomatic) lacunar infarcts, microbleeds and enlarged Virchow-Robin spaces. The patients are eligible when the first DCE-MRI scan can be performed 8-12 weeks after the TIA to avoid the acute phase, and the second MRI-scan within four weeks after the first.
Cortical stroke or primary intracerebral hemorrhage patients:
Exclusion criteria
All subjects:
cSVD patients
17 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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