| Literature DB >> 18806691 |
Andrea D Klunder1, Ming-Chang Chiang, Rebecca A Dutton, Sharon E Lee, Arthur W Toga, Oscar L Lopez, Howard J Aizenstein, James T Becker, Paul M Thompson.
Abstract
Progressive brain atrophy in HIV/AIDS is associated with impaired psychomotor performance, perhaps partly reflecting cerebellar degeneration; yet little is known about how HIV/AIDS affects the cerebellum. We visualized the three-dimensional profile of atrophy in 19 HIV-positive patients (age: 42.9+/-8.3 years) versus 15 healthy controls (age: 38.5+/-12.0 years). We localized consistent patterns of subregional atrophy with an image analysis method that automatically deforms each patient's scan, in three dimensions, to match a reference image. Atrophy was greatest in the posterior cerebellar vermis (14.9% deficit) and correlated with depression severity (P=0.009, corrected), but not with dementia, alcohol/substance abuse, CD4+T-cell counts, or viral load. Profound cerebellar deficits in HIV/AIDS (P=0.007, corrected) were associated with depression, suggesting a surrogate disease marker for antiretroviral trials.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18806691 PMCID: PMC2713099 DOI: 10.1097/WNR.0b013e328311d374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroreport ISSN: 0959-4965 Impact factor: 1.837