Post-stroke cognitive impairment on the Mini-Mental State Examination primarily relates to left middle cerebral artery infarcts

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Weaver, Nick A
Kancheva, Angelina K
Lim, Jae-Sung
Biesbroek, J. MatthijsORCID 0000-0001-7017-2148
Wajer, Irene Mc Huenges
Kang, Yeonwook
Kim, Beom J
Kuijf, Hugo J.ORCID 0000-0001-6997-9059ISNI 0000000393308567
Lee, Byung-Chul
Lee, Keon-Joo

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc

Abstract

Background: Post-stroke cognitive impairment can occur after damage to various brain regions, and cognitive deficits depend on infarct location. The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) is still widely used to assess post-stroke cognition, but it has been criticized for capturing only certain cognitive deficits. Along these lines, it might be hypothesized that cognitive deficits as measured with the MMSE primarily involve certain infarct locations. Aims: This comprehensive lesion-symptom mapping study aimed to determine which acute infarct locations are associated with post-stroke cognitive impairment on the MMSE. Methods: We examined associations between impairment on the MMSE (<5th percentile; normative data) and infarct location in 1198 patients (age 67 ± 12 years, 43% female) with acute ischemic stroke using voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping. As a frame of reference, infarct patterns associated with impairments in individual cognitive domains were determined, based on a more detailed neuropsychological assessment. Results: Impairment on the MMSE was present in 420 patients (35%). Large voxel clusters in the left middle cerebral artery territory and thalamus were significantly (p < 0.01) associated with cognitive impairment on the MMSE, with highest odds ratios (>15) in the thalamus and superior temporal gyrus. In comparison, domain-specific impairments were related to various infarct patterns across both hemispheres including the left medial temporal lobe (verbal memory) and right parietal lobe (visuospatial functioning). Conclusions: Our findings indicate that post-stroke cognitive impairment on the MMSE primarily relates to infarct locations in the left middle cerebral artery territory. The MMSE is apparently less sensitive to cognitive deficits that specifically relate to other locations.

Keywords

cerebral infarction, cognitive impairment, ischemic stroke, lesion-symptom mapping, Mini-Mental State Examination, MRI, Neurology, Journal Article

Citation

Weaver, N A, Kancheva, A K, Lim, J-S, Biesbroek, J M, Wajer, I M H, Kang, Y, Kim, B J, Kuijf, H J, Lee, B-C, Lee, K-J, Yu, K-H, Biessels, G J & Bae, H-J 2021, 'Post-stroke cognitive impairment on the Mini-Mental State Examination primarily relates to left middle cerebral artery infarcts', International Journal of Stroke, vol. 16, no. 8, pp. 981-989. https://doi.org/10.1177/1747493020984552