Intracranial pulsatility in patients with cerebral small vessel disease: a systematic review

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Abstract / Description of output

Growing evidence suggests that increased intracranial pulsatility is associated with cerebral small vessel disease (SVD). We systematically reviewed papers that assessed intracranial pulsatility in subjects with SVD. We included 27 cross-sectional studies (n=3356): 20 used Doppler ultrasound and 7 used phase-contrast MRI. Most studies measured pulsatility in the internal carotid or middle cerebral arteries (ICA, MCA), whereas few assessed veins or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Methods to reduce bias and risk factor adjustment were poorly reported. Substantial variation between studies in assessment of SVD and of pulsatility indices precluded a formal meta-analysis. Eight studies compared pulsatility by SVD severity (n=26-159, median=74.5): arterial pulsatility index was generally higher in more severe SVD (e.g. MCA: standardised mean difference=3.24, 95% confidence interval [2.40, 4.07]), although most did not match for age. 17 studies (n=9-700; median=110) performed regression or correlation analysis, of which most showed that increased pulsatility was associated with SVD after adjustment for age. In conclusion, most studies support a cross-sectional association between higher pulsatility in large intracranial arteries and SVD. Future studies should minimise bias, adjust for potential confounders, include pulsatility in veins and CSF, and examine longitudinal relationship between pulsatility and SVD. Agreement on reliable measures of intracranial pulsatility would be helpful.
Original languageEnglish
JournalClinical science
Early online date11 Dec 2017
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 11 Dec 2017

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