This decade witnessed a resurgence of interest in vascular dementia (VaD) a
s an increasingly important cause of senile dementia. Although definitions
of dementia in general, and of VaD in particular, are still controversial r
ecent diagnostic criteria for VaD acknowledge that pathogenetic mechanisms
different from multi-infarct dementia are important in dementia causation.
These include subcortical strokes, mainly lacunes, global hypoxic-ischemic
events during acute stroke, and ischemic periventricular white matter lesio
ns of the Binswanger type. These lesions tend to be manifested primarily by
alterations of frontal executive function control. The importance of these
ischemic vascular lesions in the clinical expression of Alzheimer's diseas
e (AD) in very old subjects has also been recognized. Clinically, VaD may p
resent in two forms: Acute VaD includes large-vessel infarction, and lacuna
r dementia due to small-vessel disease, including thalamic and caudate stro
kes. Subacute VaD includes Binswanger's disease (BD), cerebral angiopathy w
ith leukoencephalopathy and CADASIL. The discovery of CADASIL, a genetic fo
rm of VaD mapped to chromosome 19 as a mutation of the Notch 3 gene, opened
research avenues into the pathogenesis of ED. Finally, epidemiological evi
dence suggests that it may be possible to prevent VaD - and perhaps degener
ative senile dementia - by controlling hypertension and other vascular risk
factors. These findings offer hope for prevention of this growing public h
ealth problem.