Changes in Brain Glutathione in patients with mild vascular cognitive impairment
Jinghan Jenny Chen, Nathan Herrmann, Kate Survilla, Sandra E. Black, Joel Ramirez, Ana C. Andreazza, Paul I. Oh, Damien Gallagher, Simon J. Graham, Krista L. Lanctôt- Psychiatry and Mental health
- Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
- Geriatrics and Gerontology
- Neurology (clinical)
- Developmental Neuroscience
- Health Policy
- Epidemiology
Abstract
Background
Oxidative stress (OS) has been implicated in age‐related neurodegeneration and may be important in prodromal states such as mild vascular cognitive impairment (mVCI). Higher peripheral OS is reported in mVCI patients; however, the role of central antioxidant defenses in mVCI is unclear. Glutathione (GSH) is a major brain antioxidant, and so brain GSH in possible mVCI vs. controls was assessed.
Method
Possible mVCI patients (1 standard deviation (SD) below population norms in verbal memory, executive function (EF), processing speed, or working memory, age 55‐85, and currently enrolled in a cardiac rehabilitation program due to having 2 or more vascular risk factors or previous vascular event) and cognitively‐normal (CN) controls are recruited from a 6‐month exercise rehabilitation program. All participants received 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MEscher–GArwood Point Resolved Spectroscopy) to quantify brain GSH at baseline in the anterior cingulate (AC) and occipital region (OC). Spectroscopic analysis was completed using the Gannet toolkit (vers. 3.1) in Matlab (vers. 2020b), a cut‐off of 20% was used to reject spectra of poor quality.
Result
In 30 participants (mVCI n = 16, CN n = 14), anterior cingulate (AC) GSH (I.U. ± SD) was higher in mVCI (1.86 ± 0.45) compared to CN (1.63 ± 0.50) (F(1,18.8) = 4.6, P = 0.04), this difference became trending after correcting for cerebrospinal fluid volume ((F(1,18.2) = 3.9, P = 0.06). No difference was detected for OC‐GSH before or after correcting for cerebrospinal fluid volume. Higher AC‐GSH was correlated with lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment score (rho (26) = ‐0.42, p = 0.02).
Conclusion
Preliminary data suggest an upregulation in anterior cingulate glutathione in mVCI, which might reflect a compensatory increase in antioxidants as a response to increase peripheral oxidative stress previously reported in these patients. Recruitment is ongoing and additional participants are needed to reinforce findings.