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Treatment in Behavioral Neurology & Neuropsychiatry
Published Online: 3 August 2021

Cognitive Dysfunction in White Matter Disorders: New Perspectives in Treatment and Recovery

Publication: The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences

Abstract

White matter disorders are increasingly appreciated as capable of disrupting cognitive function, and this impairment may be sufficiently severe to produce the syndrome of white matter dementia. Although recognizing this problem is important for diagnostic accuracy, the treatment of cognitive dysfunction and dementia in the white matter disorders has received relatively little attention. Similarly, few data are available regarding the potential for cognitive recovery in these disorders. Recent clinical and laboratory advances, however, indicate that effective treatment and meaningful recovery may be achievable goals for many patients with macrostructural or microstructural white matter pathology. One recent observation is that leukoaraiosis has been observed to regress with treatment of hypertension, often with concomitant improvement in cognition. Equally novel is emerging evidence that white matter exhibits substantial plasticity related to activity-dependent myelination and that this phenomenon may produce clinical benefit. These insights suggest that noninvasive and inexpensive interventions targeting white matter are warranted for a wide range of cognitively impaired patients. Moreover, given the well-established risk that vascular white matter pathology portends for developing dementia—including both vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease—the application of these principles before dementia onset may also be efficacious for prevention. In view of the increasingly compelling case for early white matter involvement in the etiopathogenesis of late-life dementia and the continuing lack of disease-modifying therapy, progress in treating cognitive disturbances arising from white matter disorders offers the prospect that this approach may enhance the prevention of dementia as well as the treatment of cognitive dysfunction.

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Published In

Go to The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
Go to The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
Pages: 349 - 355
PubMed: 34340526

History

Received: 29 March 2021
Accepted: 6 May 2021
Published online: 3 August 2021
Published in print: Fall 2021

Keywords

  1. White Matter
  2. Leukoaraiosis
  3. Restoration
  4. Myelin
  5. Plasticity

Authors

Affiliations

Christopher M. Filley, M.D. [email protected]
Behavioral Neurology Section, Departments of Neurology and Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora; and Marcus Institute for Brain Health, Aurora, Colo.

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Filley ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

Dr. Filley reports no financial relationships with commercial interests.

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