Skip to main content
Search
Main content
Lancet Neurol
Published

Small vessel disease: mechanisms and clinical implications.

Authors

Joanna M Wardlaw, Colin Smith, Martin Dichgans

Abstract

Small vessel disease is a disorder of cerebral microvessels that causes white matter hyperintensities and several other common abnormalities (eg, recent small subcortical infarcts and lacunes) seen on brain imaging. Despite being a common cause of stroke and vascular dementia, the underlying pathogenesis is poorly understood. Research in humans has identified several manifestations of cerebral microvessel endothelial dysfunction including blood-brain barrier dysfunction, impaired vasodilation, vessel stiffening, dysfunctional blood flow and interstitial fluid drainage, white matter rarefaction, ischaemia, inflammation, myelin damage, and secondary neurodegeneration. These brain abnormalities are more dynamic and widespread than previously thought. Relationships between lesions and symptoms are highly variable but poorly understood. Major challenges are the determination of which vascular dysfunctions are most important in pathogenesis, which abnormalities are reversible, and why lesion progression and symptomatology are so variable. This knowledge will help to identify potential targets for intervention and improve risk prediction for individuals with small vessel disease.

PMID:31097385 | DOI:S1474-4422(19)30079-1

UK DRI Authors

Colin Smith Profile

Prof Colin Smith

Chair of Neuropathology; Director of Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences

Prof Colin Smith