Cerebrovascular disease is a major cause of death and disability in adults.
Silent cerebral infarction (SCI) portends more severe cerebral infarctions
or may lead to insidious progressive brain damage resulting in vascular de
mentia. This study was designed to evaluate the prevalence and risk factors
of SCI in an apparently normal adult population. Nine hundred ninety-four
consecutive symptom-free adults (mean age 49.0+/-7.7; men:women 830:164) wh
o underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging at the Center for Health Promo
tion at Samsung Medical Center were assessed. All were neurologically norma
l in history and physical examination. A total of 121 SCI lesions was obser
ved in 58 subjects. The lesion prevalence adjusted for patient age was 5.1%
. There was no gender difference in prevalence. Ninety-nine lesions were <1
cm in diameter, 15 were between 1 and 2 cm, 3 were between 2 and 3 cm, and
4 were >3 cm in diameter. The most frequent site of the SCI lesion was bas
al ganglia, after which the periventricular white matter, cerebral cortex,
and thalamus were the most frequent sites. Old age, hypertension, a history
of coronary artery disease, evidence of cardiomegaly in chest radiographs,
and high fasting glucose/hemoglobin A1c levels were associated with SCI on
univariate analysis. Multivariate analysis demonstrated old age and hypert
ension to be independent risk factors fur SCI, and mild alcohol consumption
was revealed as an independent protective factor against SCI.