Literature DB >> 19402932

Neuropsychological patterns in magnetic resonance imaging-defined subgroups of patients with degenerative dementia.

John Listerud1, Chivon Powers, Peachie Moore, David J Libon, Murray Grossman.   

Abstract

We hypothesized that specific neuropsychological deficits were associated with specific patterns of atrophy. A magnetic resonance imaging volumetric study and a neuropsychological protocol were obtained for patients with several frontotemporal lobar dementia phenotypes including a social/dysexecutive (SOC/EXEC, n = 17), progressive nonfluent aphasia (n = 9), semantic dementia (n = 7), corticobasal syndrome (n = 9), and Alzheimer's disease (n = 21). Blinded to testing results, patients were partitioned according to pattern of predominant cortical atrophy; our partitioning algorithm had been derived using seriation, a hierarchical classification technique. Neuropsychological test scores were regressed versus these atrophy patterns as fixed effects using the covariate total atrophy as marker for disease severity. The results showed the model accounted for substantial variance. Furthermore, the "large-scale networks" associated with each neuropsychological test conformed well to the known literature. For example, bilateral prefrontal cortical atrophy was exclusively associated with SOC/EXEC dysfunction. The neuropsychological principle of "double dissociation" was supported not just by such active associations but also by the "silence" of locations not previously implicated by the literature. We conclude that classifying patients with degenerative dementia by specific pattern of cortical atrophy has the potential to predict individual patterns of cognitive deficits.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19402932      PMCID: PMC2918516          DOI: 10.1017/S1355617709090742

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Int Neuropsychol Soc        ISSN: 1355-6177            Impact factor:   2.892


  62 in total

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5.  Antemortem diagnosis of frontotemporal lobar degeneration.

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Review 5.  Therapeutic and diagnostic challenges for frontotemporal dementia.

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6.  The role of domain-general cognitive control in language comprehension.

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  6 in total

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