Journal article
Lower susceptibility to cerebral small vessel disease in human familial longevity: The Leiden longevity study
I Altmann-Schneider, J Van Der Grond, PE Slagboom, RGJ Westendorp, AB Maier, MA Van Buchem, AJM De Craen
Stroke | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 2013
Abstract
Background and Purpose-: On MRI, cerebral white matter lesions, lacunar infarcts, and cerebral microbleeds are common imaging correlates of cerebral small vessel damage in apparently healthy elderly individuals. We investigated whether middle-aged to elderly offspring of nonagenarian siblings, who are predisposed to become long-lived as well, have a lower prevalence of white matter lesions, lacunar infarcts, and cerebral microbleeds than control subjects. Methods-: All subjects were from the Leiden Longevity Study. In this study, middle-aged to elderly offspring of nonagenarian siblings, who are predisposed to become long-lived as well, were contrasted to their spouses. Cerebral small vessel..
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Awarded by European Commission
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a grant from the Innovation-Oriented Research Program on Genomics (SenterNovem IGE05007), the Netherlands Consortium for Healthy Ageing (grant number 050-060-810), and the European Commission funded project Switchbox (FP7, Health-F2-2010-259772).