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UNIVERSITY OF. CAMBRIDGE. Dementia. Dr Peter J Nestor peter.nestor@mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk. Imaging challenging patients.
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UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE Dementia Dr Peter J Nestor peter.nestor@mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk
Focal lesions to the mesial temporal lobe cause amnesiaAmnesia is the first feature of Alzheimer’s diseaseNeurofibrillary tangle (t) pathology occurs earliest and most severely in the mesial temporal lobe
MRI in established AD Hippocampal atrophy Healthy elderly AD
Differing patterns of temporal atrophy in Alzheimer’s disease and semantic dementia C. J. Galton, MRCP(UK);, K. Patterson, PhD;, K. Graham, PhD;, M.A. Lambon-Ralph, PhD;, G. Williams, PhD;, N. Antoun, FRCR, FRCP;, B.J. Sahakian, PhD and J.R. Hodges, MD, FRCPNeurology 2001 57: 216-225
18FDG: a PET tracer analogue of glucose glucose-6-phosphate glucose Energy FDG-6-phosphate FDG blood vessel Brain cells Metabolic pathways of glucose and 18Fluorodeoxyglucose
The image Healthy brain areas need glucose and thus appear bright on the scan Damaged brain areas are not working and therefore do not pick up glucose
Alzheimer’s disease Co-registration Spatial normalisation to standard template Smoothing Statistics
Very mild Alzheimer’s-Isolated memory impairment Posterior cingulate hypometabolism
Retrosplenial cortex is the first area universally affected Nestor et al, Eur J Neurosci 2003
60 year old male, recent onset memory impairment, MMSE = 30/30
Anatomy Cingulum bundle
Regions of interest traced onto 3T volumetric MRI. FDG-PET co-registered onto MRI CMRglc calculated Normalised to cerebellum 3-compartment partial volume correction Method
Pathology Neuronal loss Amyloid deposition ACh activity loss NFT (t) Marker [18F]FDG [11C]PIB [11C]PMP In development Alzheimer’s disease and positron emission tomography