Cerebrovascular disease and cognition in older adults.

Gregory A Seidel, Tania Giovannetti, David J Libon
Author Information
  1. Gregory A Seidel: Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA, gregory.seidel@temple.edu.

Abstract

The well-established association between advanced age, cerebrovascular pathology, and cognitive decline is receiving greater attention as the population attains new levels of longevity. This chapter will provide an overview of vascular anatomy and age-related cerebrovascular disorders and diseases, including stroke and degenerative dementia. The cognitive and functional sequellae of these cerebrovascular disorders will also be described in detail. Throughout this review, we will emphasize topics that have been relatively underrepresented in the literature, including age-related diseases of the cerebral small vessels, nuanced characterization of cognitive impairment associated with insidious small-vessel vascular dementia, and the real-life functional consequences of cerebrovascular changes in older adults.

MeSH Term

Aging
Blood Vessels
Brain
Cerebrovascular Disorders
Cognition Disorders
Humans

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0cerebrovascularcognitivewillvascularage-relateddisordersdiseasesincludingdementiafunctionalolderadultswell-establishedassociationadvancedagepathologydeclinereceivinggreaterattentionpopulationattainsnewlevelslongevitychapterprovideoverviewanatomystrokedegenerativesequellaealsodescribeddetailThroughoutreviewemphasizetopicsrelativelyunderrepresentedliteraturecerebralsmallvesselsnuancedcharacterizationimpairmentassociatedinsidioussmall-vesselreal-lifeconsequenceschangesCerebrovasculardiseasecognition

Similar Articles

Cited By