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May 24, 2011; 76 (21) Articles

Resting bold fMRI differentiates dementia with Lewy bodies vs Alzheimer disease

J.E. Galvin, J.L. Price, Z. Yan, J.C. Morris, Y.I. Sheline
First published April 27, 2011, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0b013e31821ccc83
J.E. Galvin
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J.L. Price
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Z. Yan
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Citation
Resting bold fMRI differentiates dementia with Lewy bodies vs Alzheimer disease
J.E. Galvin, J.L. Price, Z. Yan, J.C. Morris, Y.I. Sheline
Neurology May 2011, 76 (21) 1797-1803; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31821ccc83

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Abstract

Objective: Clinicopathologic phenotypes of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Alzheimer disease (AD) often overlap, making discrimination difficult. We performed resting state blood oxygen level–dependent (BOLD) functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) to determine whether there were differences between AD and DLB.

Methods: Participants (n = 88) enrolled in a longitudinal study of memory and aging underwent 3-T fcMRI. Clinical diagnoses of probable DLB (n = 15) were made according to published criteria. Cognitively normal control participants (n = 38) were selected for the absence of cerebral amyloid burden as imaged with Pittsburgh compound B (PiB). Probable AD cases (n = 35) met published criteria and had appreciable amyloid deposits with PiB imaging. Functional images were collected using a gradient spin-echo sequence sensitive to BOLD contrast (T2* weighting). Correlation maps selected a seed region in the combined bilateral precuneus.

Results: Participants with DLB had a functional connectivity pattern for the precuneus seed region that was distinct from AD; both the DLB and AD groups had functional connectivity patterns that differed from the cognitively normal group. In the DLB group, we found increased connectivity between the precuneus and regions in the dorsal attention network and the putamen. In contrast, we found decreased connectivity between the precuneus and other task-negative default regions and visual cortices. There was also a reversal of connectivity in the right hippocampus.

Conclusions: Changes in functional connectivity in DLB indicate patterns of activation that are distinct from those seen in AD and may improve discrimination of DLB from AD and cognitively normal individuals. Since patterns of connectivity differ between AD and DLB groups, measurements of BOLD functional connectivity can shed further light on neuroanatomic connections that distinguish DLB from AD.

Footnotes

  • Study funding: Supported by the NIH/NIA P50 AG05681, P01 AG03991, and P01 AG026276.

  • Supplemental data at www.neurology.org

  • AD
    Alzheimer disease
    BA
    Brodmann area
    BOLD
    blood oxygen level–dependent
    CDR
    Clinical Dementia Rating
    DLB
    dementia with Lewy bodies
    DMN
    default mode network
    fcMRI
    functional connectivity MRI
    FDG
    fluorodeoxyglucose
    FSE
    fast spin echo
    MCBP
    mean cortical binding potential
    MPRAGE
    magnetization-prepared rapid gradient echo
    PiB
    Pittsburgh compound B
    TE
    echo time
    TI
    inversion time
    TR
    repetition time

  • Received July 6, 2010.
  • Accepted February 10, 2011.
  • Copyright © 2011 by AAN Enterprises, Inc.
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