Aims/hypothesis
Type 2 diabetes mellitus has been associated with brain atrophy and cognitive decline, but the association with ischaemic
white matter lesions is unclear. Previous neuroimaging studies have mainly used semiquantitative rating scales to measure
atrophy and white matter lesions (WMLs). In this study we used an automated segmentation technique to investigate the association
of type 2 diabetes, several diabetes-related risk factors and cognition with cerebral tissue and WML volumes.
Subjects and methods
Magnetic resonance images of 99 patients with type 2 diabetes and 46 control participants from a population-based sample were
segmented using a k-nearest neighbour classifier trained on ten manually segmented data sets. White matter, grey matter, lateral ventricles,
cerebrospinal fluid not including lateral ventricles, and WML volumes were assessed. Analyses were adjusted for age, sex,
level of education and intracranial volume.
Results
Type 2 diabetes was associated with a smaller volume of grey matter (−21.8 ml; 95% CI −34.2, −9.4) and with larger lateral
ventricle volume (7.1 ml; 95% CI 2.3, 12.0) and with larger white matter lesion volume (56.5%; 95% CI 4.0, 135.8), whereas
white matter volume was not affected. In separate analyses for men and women, the effects of diabetes were only significant
in women.
Conclusions/interpretation
The combination of atrophy with larger WML volume indicates that type 2 diabetes is associated with mixed pathology in the
brain. The observed sex differences were unexpected and need to be addressed in further studies.
Keywords Brain - Diabetes mellitus type 2 - Image analysis - Computer-assisted - Leukoaraiosis - Magnetic resonance imaging - White matter lesion