The relationship between synaptodendritic neuropathology and HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders is moderated by cognitive reserve.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of NeuroVirology Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-09 DOI:10.1007/s13365-023-01177-5
Arin Fisher, David J Moore, Andrew J Levine, Eliezer Masliah, Ben Gouaux, Virawudh Soontornniyomkij, Scott Letendre, Erin E Sundermann
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Abstract

We examined whether cognitive reserve moderated the relationship between neurodegeneration and cognition in 67 postmortem persons with HIV (PWH) who were cognitively assessed within 1 year of death. Cognitive reserve was measured via the Wide Range Achievement Test-4 reading subtest (WRAT4). Synaptodendritic neurodegeneration was based on densities of synaptophysin and microtubule-associated protein 2 immunohistochemical reactivity in frontal cortex, and categorized as minimal, moderate, or severe (tertile-split). T-Scores from 15 cognitive tests were averaged into a global cognitive T-score. Among those with low cognitive reserve (based on WRAT4 median split), the moderate neurodegeneration group showed cognition that was poorer than the minimal neurodegeneration group and comparable to the severe neurodegeneration group. Among those with high cognitive reserve, the moderate neurodegeneration group showed cognition comparable to the minimal neurodegeneration group and better than the severe neurodegeneration group. High cognitive reserve may buffer against cognitive impairment among PWH with moderate, but not severe, neurodegeneration.

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突触树突神经病理学和HIV相关神经认知障碍之间的关系由认知储备调节。
我们研究了67名HIV(PWH)死后1年内接受认知评估的人的认知储备是否调节了神经退行性变和认知之间的关系。认知储备通过广泛成就测试-4阅读子测验(WRAT4)进行测量。突触变性神经退行性变是基于额叶皮质中突触素和微管相关蛋白2免疫组织化学反应的密度,分为轻度、中度或重度(三分之一)。将15项认知测试的T型得分平均为全局认知T型得分。在认知储备较低的人群中(基于WRAT4中位数),中度神经退行性变组的认知能力低于轻度神经退行性变性组,与重度神经退行性病变组相当。在认知储备较高的人群中,中度神经退行性变组的认知能力与轻度神经退行性变性组相当,优于重度神经退行性病变组。在患有中度但不严重神经退行性变的PWH中,高认知储备可以缓冲认知障碍。
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来源期刊
Journal of NeuroVirology
Journal of NeuroVirology 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
3.10%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of NeuroVirology (JNV) provides a unique platform for the publication of high-quality basic science and clinical studies on the molecular biology and pathogenesis of viral infections of the nervous system, and for reporting on the development of novel therapeutic strategies using neurotropic viral vectors. The Journal also emphasizes publication of non-viral infections that affect the central nervous system. The Journal publishes original research articles, reviews, case reports, coverage of various scientific meetings, along with supplements and special issues on selected subjects. The Journal is currently accepting submissions of original work from the following basic and clinical research areas: Aging & Neurodegeneration, Apoptosis, CNS Signal Transduction, Emerging CNS Infections, Molecular Virology, Neural-Immune Interaction, Novel Diagnostics, Novel Therapeutics, Stem Cell Biology, Transmissable Encephalopathies/Prion, Vaccine Development, Viral Genomics, Viral Neurooncology, Viral Neurochemistry, Viral Neuroimmunology, Viral Neuropharmacology.
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