Abstract

The neuropsychological tests in patients with internal carotid artery (ICA) demonstrated cognitive deficits associated with frontal lobe dysfunction, but the pathophysiological mechanism of memory impairment is not fully understood. This study evaluated relationship between degree of ICA stenosis and frontal activations induced by working memory (WM) task using fMRI. The fMRI data of 21 patients with unilateral ICA stenosis (left/right, 11/10) and 21 controls were analyzed. In comparison with controls, ICA patients demonstrated significant activations in middle frontal gyrus (MFG) bilaterally, particularly in left MFG. In right ICA stenosis, there was slightly less MFG activation than that of controls. Importantly, lower MFG activity was associated with higher stenosis of ipsilateral ICA. For left ICA stenosis, weaker activation in left MFG was negatively correlated with degree of stenosis. Similarly, for right ICA stenosis, there was a significant negative correlation between right ICA stenosis and weaker activation of right MFG. Cognitive impairments in ICA stenosis were associated with frontal lobe dysfunctions. Left ICA stenosis had worse WM impairments than right ICA stenosis, which was affected by the degree of stenosis.

Highlights

  • Cerebrovascular diseases are associated with cognitive decline and dementia

  • The right internal carotid artery (ICA) patients found slightly less activation in the right middle frontal gyrus (MFG). Such weaker MFG activity was associated with a higher stenosis of ipsilateral ICA

  • A significant negative correlation was found between left ICA stenosis and activation of left MFG in the left ICA patients

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with occlusive diseases of the internal carotid artery (ICA) are at risk for cognitive impairment [1,2,3]. Neuropsychological tests show cognitive deficits in working memory (WM), attention, reasoning, psychomotor speed, and executive functions; frontal lobe dysfunction has been a consistent finding [4,5,6,7]. Several studies reported worse memory impairment in patients with left carotid artery disease than those with right carotid artery disease. The cognitive functions of carotid occlusive disease have been assessed using neuropsychological tests [4,5,6,7, 11, 13]. Previous neuropsychological tests are not able to precisely reveal cognitive deficits in specific brain regions involving particular tasks.

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