J Korean Acad Rehabil Med.  2002 Dec;26(6):639-646.

Vascular Dementia

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurology, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Korea. dukna@smc.samsung.co.kr

Abstract

Vascular dementia (VD) is a dementia syndrome associated with cerebrovascular disease. Among the several subtypes of VD, most common subtypes are multi-infarct dementia, single-infarct dementia, and subcortical vascular dementia. In patients with multi-infarct dementia, dementia occurs with a close temporal relationship to stroke episodes. Brain imaging usually shows multiple territory cortico-subcortical infarcts. Single-infarct dementia, in contrast, is caused by a single infarct in specific regions of the brain such as thalamus, caudate nucleus, capsular genu, angular gyrus, or hippocampus. In subcortical VD, primary lesion is lacunar infacts or ischemic white matter lesions that are located in subcortical regions, i.e., deep nuclei (basal ganglia and thalamus) or white matter (periventricular and deep white matter). The diagnosis of subcortical vascular dementia is challenging, since stroke episodes are often unrecognized, thus temporal relationship between onset of dementia and stroke is lacking. This article describes 1) subtypes of VD, 2) illustrative cases with vascular dementia, 3) research criteria for VD, 4) treatment of VD, and 5) a general guideline on caregiving for patients with VD, which will enable clinicians to provide better diagnosis and management of patients with VD.

Keyword

Vascular dementia; Dementia; Cerebrovascular disease; Stroke

MeSH Terms

Brain
Caudate Nucleus
Dementia
Dementia, Multi-Infarct
Dementia, Vascular*
Diagnosis
Ganglia
Hippocampus
Humans
Neuroimaging
Stroke
Thalamus
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