Vasculitis Dementia refers to cognitive impairment and dementia resulting from cerebral vasculitis—inflammation and damage to the blood vessels of the brain. This condition represents a potentially treatable cause of dementia, as opposed to the more common neurodegenerative dementias. Cerebral vasculitis (also known as angiitis) can affect vessels of any size and lead to ischemic damage, hemorrhage, and progressive cognitive decline.
Primary Angiitis of the CNS (PACNS)
- Isolated inflammation of brain vessels with no systemic involvement
- Also called primary angiitis of the central nervous system
- Most common form of CNS vasculitis
- Typically affects small to medium vessels
- Systemic vasculitides: Giant cell arteritis, Takayasu arteritis, polyarteritis nodosa
- Infection-associated: Syphilis, Lyme disease, viral vasculitis
- Autoimmune-associated: SLE, Behçet's disease, sarcoidosis
- Drug-induced: Cocaine, amphetamines, certain medications
- Ischemic injury: Vessel inflammation leads to luminal narrowing and thrombosis
- Hemorrhage: Vessel wall necrosis can cause bleeding into brain tissue
- Blood-brain barrier disruption: Allows inflammatory cells and mediators into CNS
- Microinfarcts: Multiple small vessel involvement causes diffuse injury
- White matter damage: Subcortical leukoaraiosis and demyelination
- Small vessel vasculitis: Lenticulostriate arteries, thalamoperforating arteries
- Medium vessel vasculitis: Cortical arteries, penetrating branches
- Large vessel vasculitis: Internal carotid, vertebral, basilar arteries
- Progressive cognitive decline: Often subacute onset over weeks to months
- Executive dysfunction: Planning, organization, problem-solving difficulties
- Memory impairment: Both short-term and working memory
- Attention deficits: Difficulty concentrating and sustaining attention
- Processing speed slowing: Takes longer to complete cognitive tasks
- Visuospatial deficits: Problems with spatial orientation
- Language difficulties: Particularly in medium vessel involvement
- Headache: Often persistent, sometimes severe
- Seizures: Focal or generalized seizures
- Focal deficits: Depends on affected vascular territory
- Cranial nerve palsies: Especially with basilar involvement
- Ataxia: With cerebellar vessel involvement
- Movement disorders: Rare, with basal ganglia involvement
- Psychiatric symptoms: Depression, anxiety, psychosis
- Fever, weight loss, night sweats
- Arthralgias, myalgias
- Skin rash
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Renal involvement
- Pulmonary symptoms
- Incidence: 2-3 cases per million per year for PACNS
- Age distribution: Bimodal—young adults (30-40) and elderly (>60)
- Sex distribution: Slight male predominance in PACNS
- Risk factors: None clearly established for primary form
- Prognosis: Potentially reversible with treatment if caught early
Consider vasculitis dementia in patients with:
- Subacute onset of cognitive decline (weeks to months)
- Associated headache or neurological symptoms
- Younger age (<60 years)
- Elevated inflammatory markers
- History of systemic autoimmune disease
- Inflammatory markers: ESR, CRP (often elevated)
- Autoimmune panel: ANA, ANCA, anti-ENA, rheumatoid factor
- Infection screening: Syphilis serology, Lyme, HIV, hepatitis
- CSF analysis: Elevated protein, mild pleocytosis, may show oligoclonal bands
- Temporal artery biopsy: For suspected giant cell arteritis
- MRI brain: T2/FLAIR hyperintensities (white matter lesions), infarcts, hemorrhage
- MR angiography: Can show vessel wall thickening and luminal irregularities
- CT angiography: Alternative to MRA for larger vessels
- Conventional angiography: Gold standard for medium/large vessel vasculitis
- PET: May show increased vascular wall uptake
- Definitive diagnosis in some cases
- Shows vessel wall inflammation, necrosis, inflammatory cell infiltrate
- Helps differentiate from other causes
- History/clinical findings of acquired neurological deficits
- Angiographic or histopathological evidence of CNS vasculitis
- No evidence of systemic vasculitis or other conditions
- Exclusion of other causes
- Binswanger's disease: Small vessel ischemic disease, typically hypertensive
- Multi-infarct dementia: Multiple cortical infarcts
- Cerebral amyloid angiopathy: Amyloid deposition in vessels
- Susac syndrome: Autoimmune microangiopathy affecting brain, retina, cochlea
- Moyamoya disease: Progressive intracranial vessel occlusion
- Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome: Vasospasm without true inflammation
- CADASIL: Hereditary small vessel disease
- Degos disease: Rare vasculopathy
Corticosteroids
- Pulse steroids: Methylprednisolone 1g IV daily for 3-5 days
- Oral prednisone: 1 mg/kg/day, taper over 12-18 months
- Monitor for: hyperglycemia, infection, osteoporosis
Cytotoxic Agents
- Cyclophosphamide: Induction therapy, 2-4 mg/kg IV or oral
- Azathioprine: Maintenance, 2-2.5 mg/kg/day
- Mycophenolate mofetil: Alternative maintenance
- Methotrexate: Alternative maintenance (avoid in renal involvement)
Biologic Agents
- Rituximab: For ANCA-associated vasculitis
- Tocilizumab: For refractory cases
- Infliximab: TNF-alpha inhibitor in severe cases
- Low-dose aspirin: May help prevent thrombosis
- Anticoagulation: Generally avoided due to hemorrhage risk
- Cognitive rehabilitation: Occupational therapy
- Seizure control: Antiepileptic medications
- Mood stabilization: Antidepressants as needed
- Pain management: For headaches
- Clinical improvement: Often within weeks to months
- Radiographic improvement: May lag behind clinical response
- Relapse risk: 25-40% in first 5 years
- Maintenance therapy: Often needed for 2-3 years
- Early treatment: Critical for better outcomes
- Extent of disease: Diffuse involvement worse prognosis
- Age: Younger patients generally do better
- Treatment response: Early responders have better outcomes
- Complete recovery: Possible in 30-40% with early treatment
- Partial recovery: Common, with residual deficits
- Progression despite treatment: 20-30% have ongoing disease
- Mortality: 10-20% mortality, often due to infection or disease complications
Vasculitis dementia represents an important potentially reversible cause of cognitive impairment. Prompt recognition and aggressive immunosuppressive treatment can lead to significant recovery in many cases. The key to diagnosis is maintaining a high index of suspicion in patients with subacute cognitive decline, particularly when associated with headache, seizures, or other focal neurological symptoms. Multidisciplinary management involving neurologists, rheumatologists, and radiologists is essential for optimal care.
Recent research on Vasculitis Dementia includes:
- 2024: Title - Description