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Demonstrating a reduced capacity for removal of fluid from cerebral white matter and hypoxia in areas of white matter hyperintensity associated with age and dementia
Acta Neuropathol Commun. 2020 Aug 8;8(1):131. doi: 10.1186/s40478-020-01009-1.
Matthew MacGregor Sharp 1, Satoshi Saito 1, Abby Keable 1, Maureen Gatherer 1, Roxana Aldea 1 2, Nivedita Agarwal 3, Julie E Simpson 4, Stephen B Wharton 4, Roy O Weller 1, Roxana O Carare 5
Abstract:
White matter hyperintensities (WMH) occur in association with dementia but the aetiology is unclear. Here we test the hypothesis that there is a combination of impaired elimination of interstitial fluid from the white matter together with a degree of hypoxia in WMH. One of the mechanisms for the elimination of amyloid-β (Aβ) from the brain is along the basement membranes in the walls of capillaries and arteries (Intramural Peri-Arterial Drainage - IPAD). We compared the dynamics of IPAD in the grey matter of the hippocampus and in the white matter of the corpus callosum in 10 week old C57/B16 mice by injecting soluble Aβ as a tracer. The dynamics of IPAD in the white matter were significantly slower compared with the grey matter and this was associated with a lower density of capillaries in the white matter. Exposing cultures of smooth muscle cells to hypercapnia as a model of cerebral hypoperfusion resulted in a reduction in fibronectin and an increase in laminin in the extracellular matrix. Similar changes were detected in the white matter in human WMH suggesting that hypercapnia/hypoxia may play a role in WMH. Employing therapies to enhance both IPAD and blood flow in the white matter may reduce WMH in patients with dementia.
PMID: 32771063
Free Full-Text: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7414710/