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November 13, 2001; 57 (9) Articles

Beyond the hippocampus

MRI volumetry confirms widespread limbic atrophy in AD

D.J.A. Callen, S.E. Black, F. Gao, C.B. Caldwell, J.P. Szalai
First published November 13, 2001, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.57.9.1669
D.J.A. Callen
PhD
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S.E. Black
MD FRCP(C)
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F. Gao
MD
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C.B. Caldwell
PhD
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J.P. Szalai
PhD
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Citation
Beyond the hippocampus
MRI volumetry confirms widespread limbic atrophy in AD
D.J.A. Callen, S.E. Black, F. Gao, C.B. Caldwell, J.P. Szalai
Neurology Nov 2001, 57 (9) 1669-1674; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.57.9.1669

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Abstract

Objective: To examine volumetric changes in limbic structures in patients with probable AD using planimetric measures on MRI.

Method: Limbic structures (i.e., hippocampus, amygdala, anterior thalamus, hypothalamus, mamillary bodies, basal forebrain, septal area, fornix, and cingulate, orbitofrontal, and parahippocampal cortices) were traced on 3D T1-weighted MR images of 40 patients with mild to moderate AD and 40 age-, sex-, and education-matched normal control subjects. Limbic volumes were compared between groups and the predictive ability was assessed.

Results: Overall, limbic structures showed significant atrophy in AD patients compared with normal control subjects. Differences (p < 0.05) were found in all limbic regions except the anterior cingulate cortex. The greatest percentage volumetric losses occurred in the septal area (34%), hippocampus (28%), amygdala (21%), parahippocampal cortex (21%), and posterior cingulate cortex (20%). Combining volumetric measures of amygdala and septal area distinguished patients with AD from normal control subjects with 93% accuracy.

Conclusions: These results verify that system-wide limbic degeneration occurs in patients with AD. In addition, atrophy in selected limbic structures was used to distinguish patients with AD from normal elderly individuals with over 90% accuracy in this select clinical sample. The measures require further exploration in samples more representative of those seen by primary care physicians before their utility can be accurately assessed.

  • Received February 2, 2001.
  • Accepted August 1, 2001.
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