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Cognition & social

White matter hyperintensities (WMH)

DEHyperintensitäten der weißen Substanz (WMH)

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White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are regions of abnormally high signal intensity on T2-weighted and FLAIR MRI sequences within the cerebral white matter, reflecting focal demyelination, axonal loss, gliosis and small-vessel ischaemia rather than a single pathological entity. Their prevalence rises steeply with age — present in roughly 10–20% of individuals in their 60s and in the majority of those over 80 — and their volume is strongly associated with hypertension, diabetes, and smoking as modifiable risk drivers. WMH predict cognitive decline (particularly processing speed and executive function), incident dementia, stroke and mortality; large or rapidly progressing confluent WMH carry greater clinical weight than small punctate lesions. They are a key imaging marker in the diagnosis of cerebral small vessel disease and in vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID).

Sources

  1. Fazekas F, Chawluk JB, Alavi A, Hurtig HI, Zimmerman RA. (1987). MR signal abnormalities at 1.5 T in Alzheimer's dementia and normal aging. *AJR American Journal of Roentgenology*doi:10.2214/ajr.149.2.351
  2. Debette S, Markus HS. (2010). White matter lesions detected by magnetic resonance imaging: clinical significance. *BMJ*doi:10.1136/bmj.c3666