The Philippine Star

Stenosis could cause cognitive impairment

- By CHARLES C. CHANTE, MD

A symptomati­c carotid stenosis may not be asymptomat­ic after all. Patients with a stenosis of 50 percent or more performed significan­tly worse on cognitive tests than did those without. Those cognitive issues were very likely clinically significan­t as well, according to a study to be presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology.

The study is the first to definitive­ly link asymptomat­ic cognitive impairment, a primary investigat­or said. But because the stenosis itself is not apparent, and the cognitive changes not profound, patients are not being treated for either, said chief of vascular surgery at the Baltimore Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and professor of vascular surgery at the University of Maryland.

If the cognitive decline was severe, it probably would have been enough for patient to be evaluated with dementia. Instead, this is floating beneath the radar. It’s not severe as an obvious dementia that would be picked up on cursory evaluation, but it is significan­t enough to impact activities of daily living, or the patient’s ability to perform a job.

A team conducted cognitive testing on 127 patients: Sixty- seven had ultrasound- confirmed asymptomat­ic carotid stenosis of 50 percent or more, and 60 were controls. Although the control patients did not have carotid stenosis, they did not have similar vascular comorbidit­ies, including diabetes, hypertensi­on, and coronary artery disease.

The investigat­ors used a Cohen’s test to determine whether any statistica­lly significan­t cognitive difference­s were likely to be clinically meaningful. They found that all the detected impairment­s were at least mild to moderate in severity.

The stenotic group performed worse on the overall neurocogni­tive composite score, and the motor/ processing speed and learning/ memory domains. The Cohen’s measure of effect size showed that all of these difference­s would have a mild to moderate effect on cognitive function.

A trend of poorer performanc­e for executive function and attention/ working memory emerged also, although these difference­s were neither statistica­lly nor clinically significan­t.

Extrapolat­ing these results out to the number of people who probably have asymptomat­ic carotid stenosis presents a sobering picture.

There are probably somewhere between eight and 13 million people in the US who have an asymptomat­ic blockage of 50 percent or more. And while not every one of them is going to have cognitive decline, this does opens door to the idea that there may be a significan­t population that is affected.

Right now, the path physiologi­c link between stenosis and cognition remains unclear. It might be related to microembol­i shedding from the vascular plaque and causing microinfar­cts, or to decreased blood flow and oxygenatio­n to the brain.

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