BACKGROUND: To determine whether white matter (WM) memory network changes accompany early cognitive impairment and whether these changes represent early, pathologically independent axonal affection, we combined WM diffusion tensor imaging and cortical morphometric measurements of normal control subjects, patients with only subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). METHODS: We included 66 patients with SCI or MCI and 21 control subjects from a university-hospital-based memory clinic in a cross-sectional study. Morphometric analysis was performed in FreeSurfer, and Tract-Based Spatial Statistics was used for analysis of diffusion tensor imaging-derived WM fractional anisotropy, radial diffusivity (DR), and mean diffusivity (MD). Relationships between WM measures and stage were assessed with whole-brain voxelwise statistics and on a region-of-interest basis, with subsequent correction for cortical atrophy. RESULTS: In SCI patients, as compared with control subjects, there were widespread changes in DR and MD. No significant differences in thickness could be demonstrated. In MCI patients, as compared with control subjects, there were widespread changes in DR, MD, and fractional anisotropy; the precuneal and inferior parietal cortices were thinner; and the hippocampus was smaller. Multiple logistic regression analysis eliminated morphometry as an explanatory variable in favor of DR/MD for all regions of interest, except in the precuneus, where both thickness and DR/MD were significant explanatory variables. CONCLUSIONS: WM tract degeneration is prominent in SCI and MCI patients, and is at least in part independent of overlying gray matter atrophy.
BACKGROUND: To determine whether white matter (WM) memory network changes accompany early cognitive impairment and whether these changes represent early, pathologically independent axonal affection, we combined WM diffusion tensor imaging and cortical morphometric measurements of normal control subjects, patients with only subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). METHODS: We included 66 patients with SCI or MCI and 21 control subjects from a university-hospital-based memory clinic in a cross-sectional study. Morphometric analysis was performed in FreeSurfer, and Tract-Based Spatial Statistics was used for analysis of diffusion tensor imaging-derived WM fractional anisotropy, radial diffusivity (DR), and mean diffusivity (MD). Relationships between WM measures and stage were assessed with whole-brain voxelwise statistics and on a region-of-interest basis, with subsequent correction for cortical atrophy. RESULTS: In SCI patients, as compared with control subjects, there were widespread changes in DR and MD. No significant differences in thickness could be demonstrated. In MCI patients, as compared with control subjects, there were widespread changes in DR, MD, and fractional anisotropy; the precuneal and inferior parietal cortices were thinner; and the hippocampus was smaller. Multiple logistic regression analysis eliminated morphometry as an explanatory variable in favor of DR/MD for all regions of interest, except in the precuneus, where both thickness and DR/MD were significant explanatory variables. CONCLUSIONS: WM tract degeneration is prominent in SCI and MCI patients, and is at least in part independent of overlying gray matter atrophy.
Authors: Katharina Brueggen; Martin Dyrba; Arturo Cardenas-Blanco; Anja Schneider; Klaus Fliessbach; Katharina Buerger; Daniel Janowitz; Oliver Peters; Felix Menne; Josef Priller; Eike Spruth; Jens Wiltfang; Ruth Vukovich; Christoph Laske; Martina Buchmann; Michael Wagner; Sandra Röske; Annika Spottke; Janna Rudolph; Coraline D Metzger; Ingo Kilimann; Laura Dobisch; Emrah Düzel; Frank Jessen; Stefan J Teipel Journal: J Neurol Date: 2019-06-21 Impact factor: 4.849
Authors: Nikki H Stricker; David H Salat; Jessica M Foley; Tyler A Zink; Ida L Kellison; Craig P McFarland; Laura J Grande; Regina E McGlinchey; William P Milberg; Elizabeth C Leritz Journal: J Int Neuropsychol Soc Date: 2013-07-01 Impact factor: 2.892
Authors: José Angel Pineda-Pardo; Pilar Garcés; María Eugenia López; Sara Aurtenetxe; Pablo Cuesta; Alberto Marcos; Pedro Montejo; Miguel Yus; Juan Antonio Hernández-Tamames; Francisco del Pozo; James T Becker; Fernando Maestú Journal: Brain Connect Date: 2014-04-09
Authors: Mona Lei; Jonathan D Teo; Huitong Song; Holly P McEwen; Jun Yup Lee; Timothy A Couttas; Thomas Duncan; Rose Chesworth; Josefine Bertz; Magdalena Przybyla; Janet Van Eersel; Benjamin Heng; Gilles J Guillemin; Lars M Ittner; Thomas Fath; Brett Garner; Arne Ittner; Tim Karl; Anthony S Don Journal: J Neurosci Date: 2019-10-22 Impact factor: 6.167
Authors: Alain K Koyama; Shelley S Tworoger; A Heather Eliassen; Olivia I Okereke; Marc G Weisskopf; Bernard Rosner; Kristine Yaffe; Francine Grodstein Journal: Alzheimers Dement Date: 2016-01-21 Impact factor: 21.566
Authors: Lin Zhuang; Perminder S Sachdev; Julian N Trollor; Simone Reppermund; Nicole A Kochan; Henry Brodaty; Wei Wen Journal: PLoS One Date: 2013-03-14 Impact factor: 3.240