Table 1.
Selected causes of cognitive impairment related to vascular factors
| Condition | Predominant association/cause | Target vessel and vascular pathology | Resulting brain lesions | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypoperfusion dementia |
|
|
|
(Jellinger, 2013; Johnston et al., 2004; Marshall et al., 2012) |
| “Strategic infarct” dementia |
|
|
|
(Jellinger, 2013) |
| Multiinfarct dementia |
|
|
|
(Thal et al., 2012) |
| White matter lesions (Leukoaraiosis) and lacunes |
|
|
|
(Black et al., 2009; Brown and Thore, 2011; Thal et al., 2012) |
| Microinfarcts |
|
|
|
(Smith et al., 2012) |
| Microbleeds and hemorrhages |
|
|
|
(Charidimou and Werring, 2012; Henskens et al., 2008) |
| CADASIL |
|
|
|
(Chabriat et al., 2009; Federico et al., 2012; Schmidt et al., 2012) |
| Cerebral amyloid angiopathy |
|
|
|
(Attems et al., 2011; Charidimou and Werring, 2012) |
| Post-stroke dementia |
|
|
|
(Leys et al., 2005) (Iadecola and Anrather, 2011) |
| Mixed AD vascular dementia |
|
|
|
(Jellinger, 2013; Thal et al., 2012) |
Large infarct: >1cm Ø; Lacunar infarct: 5–15 mm Ø; microinfarct: <1mm Ø; microbleeds: <5mm Ø; ATS: atherosclerosis; GOM: graular osmophilic material; Vascular risk factors: hypertension, diabetes, smoking, etc.