Atrial fibrillation and atherosclerosis cause different vascular brain lesions on magnetic resonance imaging
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) and atherosclerosis pre-dispose to the occurrence of vascular brain lesions compared with the general population, yet direct comparisons of brain lesion patterns between these two cardiovascular patient groups are lacking. This study sought to compare the prevalence and distribution of vascular brain lesions on cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) between patients with AF and those with atherosclerosis.
Baseline clinical data and standardized brain MRI scans from the Swiss Atrial Fibrillation cohort study (Swiss-AF; representing patients with AF) and the COMPASS MRI sub-study (COMPASS MIND; representing patients with atherosclerosis without AF) were used to compare the prevalence of lacunar and non-lacunar infarcts, periventricular and deep white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and cerebral micro-bleeds (CMB) between groups.
Overall, 3508 patients were included (AF:
Patients with AF had a higher rate of non-lacunar infarcts, multi-infarct patterns and more severe periventricular white matter disease compared with patients with atherosclerosis. These findings support disease-specific mechanisms in the development of vascular brain lesions in patients with cardiovascular disease.
Contributors

Raed A Joundi
Author

Abhilekh Srivastava
Author

Tim Sinnecker
Author

Stefanie Aeschbacher
Author

John W Eikelboom
Author

Rolf Wachter
Author

Eric E Smith
Author

Nicolas Rodondi
Author

Jacqueline Bosch
Author

Manuel R Blum
Author

Stuart J Connolly
Author

Juerg H Beer
Author

Kevin W Reeh
Author

Tobias Reichlin
Author

Eva M Lonn
Author

Qilong Yi
Author

Andreas S Müller
Author

Marcello Di Valentino
Author

Keith A A Fox
Author

Peter Ammann
Author

Leo H Bonati
Author

Philipp Krisai
Author

Stefan Osswald
Author

Mukul Sharma
Author

David Conen
Author





