| Literature DB >> 23539189 |
Natalie S Ryan1, Shiva Keihaninejad, Timothy J Shakespeare, Manja Lehmann, Sebastian J Crutch, Ian B Malone, John S Thornton, Laura Mancini, Harpreet Hyare, Tarek Yousry, Gerard R Ridgway, Hui Zhang, Marc Modat, Daniel C Alexander, Martin N Rossor, Sebastien Ourselin, Nick C Fox.
Abstract
Amyloid imaging studies of presymptomatic familial Alzheimer's disease have revealed the striatum and thalamus to be the earliest sites of amyloid deposition. This study aimed to investigate whether there are associated volume and diffusivity changes in these subcortical structures during the presymptomatic and symptomatic stages of familial Alzheimer's disease. As the thalamus and striatum are involved in neural networks subserving complex cognitive and behavioural functions, we also examined the diffusion characteristics in connecting white matter tracts. A cohort of 20 presenilin 1 mutation carriers underwent volumetric and diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging, neuropsychological and clinical assessments; 10 were symptomatic, 10 were presymptomatic and on average 5.6 years younger than their expected age at onset; 20 healthy control subjects were also studied. We conducted region of interest analyses of volume and diffusivity changes in the thalamus, caudate, putamen and hippocampus and examined diffusion behaviour in the white matter tracts of interest (fornix, cingulum and corpus callosum). Voxel-based morphometry and tract-based spatial statistics were also used to provide unbiased whole-brain analyses of group differences in volume and diffusion indices, respectively. We found that reduced volumes of the left thalamus and bilateral caudate were evident at a presymptomatic stage, together with increased fractional anisotropy of bilateral thalamus and left caudate. Although no significant hippocampal volume loss was evident presymptomatically, reduced mean diffusivity was observed in the right hippocampus and reduced mean and axial diffusivity in the right cingulum. In contrast, symptomatic mutation carriers showed increased mean, axial and in particular radial diffusivity, with reduced fractional anisotropy, in all of the white matter tracts of interest. The symptomatic group also showed atrophy and increased mean diffusivity in all of the subcortical grey matter regions of interest, with increased fractional anisotropy in bilateral putamen. We propose that axonal injury may be an early event in presymptomatic Alzheimer's disease, causing an initial fall in axial and mean diffusivity, which then increases with loss of axonal density. The selective degeneration of long-coursing white matter tracts, with relative preservation of short interneurons, may account for the increase in fractional anisotropy that is seen in the thalamus and caudate presymptomatically. It may be owing to their dense connectivity that imaging changes are seen first in the thalamus and striatum, which then progress to involve other regions in a vulnerable neuronal network.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23539189 PMCID: PMC3634199 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awt065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501
Subject demographics, neuropsychological and clinical data
| Presymptomatic mutation carriers (4 males, 6 females) | Symptomatic mutation carriers | Control subjects (9 males, 11 females) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 37.8 (4.7) | 49 (9.4) | 44.3 (12.7) | 0.27 |
| 0.04 | ||||
| <0.01 | ||||
| Years from estimated age at onset | 5.6 (7) | N/A | N/A | |
| Disease duration, years | N/A | 4.3 (1.7) | N/A | |
| MMSE/ 30 (range) | 29 (28–30) | 19 (13–24) | 29.9 (29–30) | <0.01 |
| 0.02 | ||||
| <0.01 | ||||
| Years of education | 13 (2.5) | 12 (1.7) | N/A | 0.20 |
| NART estimated IQ | 100.2 (12.9) | 100.1 (12.5) | N/A | 0.98 |
| WASI Verbal IQ | 101.7 (18.0) | 81.2 (17.5) | N/A | 0.02 |
| WASI Performance IQ | 106.7 (17.1) | 69.0 (15.0) | N/A | <0.01 |
| RMT words (/50) | 45.9 (3.5) | 30.0 (8.1) | N/A | <0.01 |
| RMT faces (/50) | 42.6 (5.3) | 32.4 (7.5) | N/A | <0.01 |
| Graded naming test (/30) | 19.0 (5.0) | 13.1 (7.8) | N/A | 0.5 |
| Graded difficulty arithmetic (/24) | 12.9 (6.4) | 2.4 (2.4) | N/A | <0.01 |
| Object decision (/20) | 18.2 (2.1) | 15.6 (3.2) | N/A | 0.06 |
| Stroop colour (s) | 36.2 (14.8) | 63.3 (18.3) | N/A | <0.0 |
| Stroop word (s) | 23.1 (8.4) | 49.1 (22.1) | N/A | <0.01 |
| Stroop ink colour (s) | 58.7 (20.5) | 124.4 (30.9) | N/A | <0.01 |
| Anxiety | 10% | 40% | N/A | |
| Depression | 20% | 60% | N/A | |
| Seizures | 0% | 0% | N/A | |
| Myoclonus | 40% | 60% | N/A | |
| Pyramidal signs | 0% | 60% | N/A | |
| Extrapyramidal signs | 0% | 20% | N/A |
Values are mean (SD); MMSE = Mini-Mental State Examination; RMT = Recognition Memory Test.
*n = 9 for all neuropsychological measures except Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence Performance IQ (WASI PIQ; n = 10), National Adult Reading Test (NART; n = 7) and Stroop colour ink interference (n = 5), with all reductions in n reflecting participants being untestable on specific tasks. Data for the complete cohort were available for all other statistical tests.
**Percentage in group manifesting the clinical feature.
a Unpaired t-test, two-tailed test.
b Wilcoxon ranksum test.
c Linear regression with group and age as independent variables.
Figure 1Regions of interest. Grey matter regions of interest (top): segmentations of thalamus (blue), caudate (green), putamen (pink) and hippocampus (purple) overlaid on the T1 image of a single subject. White matter tracts of interest (bottom): segmentations of the fornix (pale blue), right cingulum (purple), left cingulum (green), genu (yellow), body (red) and splenium (dark blue) of the corpus callosum, overlaid on the study-specific template.
Figure 2Mean and standard error z-scores for presymptomatic and symptomatic mutation carriers on standard neuropsychological tests. GDA = Graded Difficulty Arithmetic; GNT = Graded Naming Test; PIQ = performance IQ; RMT = Recognition Memory Test; VIQ = verbal IQ.
Mean ± SD volumes and diffusivity indices in the grey matter regions of interest
| Control subjects | Presymptomatic mutation carriers | Symptomatic mutation carriers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Right thalamus | 7792 ± 550 | 7676 ± 747 | 6103 ± 543 |
| Left thalamus | 7177 ± 652 | 6962 ± 604 | 5520 ± 404 |
| Right caudate | 4689 ± 512 | 4273 ± 553 | 3832 ± 525 |
| Left caudate | 4743 ± 506 | 4376 ± 610 | 3748 ± 588 |
| Right putamen | 5210 ± 656 | 5234 ± 695 | 4228 ± 473 |
| Left putamen | 5035 ± 680 | 4989 ± 775 | 3847 ± 655 |
| Right hippocampus | 3131 ± 304 | 3153 ± 483 | 2295 ± 477 |
| Left hippocampus | 3014 ± 278 | 3118 ± 423 | 2302 ± 459 |
| Right thalamus | 0.352 ± 0.017 | 0.367 ± 0.019 | 0.346 ± 0.031 |
| Left thalamus | 0.332 ± 0.013 | 0.343 ± 0.008 | 0.327 ± 0.031 |
| Right caudate | 0.229 ± 0.024 | 0.239 ± 0.030 | 0.243 ± 0.034 |
| Left caudate | 0.226 ± 0.017 | 0.248 ± 0.026 | 0.236 ± 0.027 |
| Right putamen | 0.222 ± 0.016 | 0.227 ± 0.013 | 0.242 ± 0.020 |
| Left putamen | 0.212 ± 0.011 | 0.214 ± 0.010 | 0.228 ± 0.021 |
| Right hippocampus | 0.184 ± 0.016 | 0.193 ± 0.022 | 0.176 ± 0.032 |
| Left hippocampus | 0.178 ± 0.019 | 0.192 ± 0.020 | 0.167 ± 0.033 |
| Right thalamus | 0.824 ± 0.030 | 0.794 ± 0.043 | 0.912 ± 0.089 |
| Left thalamus | 0.838 ± 0.029 | 0.815 ± 0.037 | 0.915 ± 0.069 |
| Right caudate | 0.956 ± 0.071 | 0.949 ± 0.068 | 1.075 ± 0.111 |
| Left caudate | 0.993 ± 0.081 | 0.955 ± 0.066 | 1.058 ± 0.072 |
| Right putamen | 0.761 ± 0.026 | 0.740 ± 0.028 | 0.840 ± 0.060 |
| Left putamen | 0.773 ± 0.040 | 0.752 ± 0.021 | 0.838 ± 0.061 |
| Right hippocampus | 0.958 ± 0.033 | 0.907 ± 0.073 | 1.094 ± 0.073 |
| Left hippocampus | 0.952 ± 0.052 | 0.921 ± 0.053 | 1.113 ± 0.096 |
The differences in adjusted means between the mutation carriers and control group (95% confidence interval) are shown in italics. Significant results at P < 0.05 are indicated by an asterisk.
Figure 3Voxel-based morphometry results showing (top left) areas of grey matter reduction in presymptomatic mutation carriers compared with control subjects after correction for multiple comparisons at FWE < 0.1 and the effect-map for the PMC versus control group comparison. In the effect-map, regions showing reduced grey matter in the PMC group are shown in red and in control subjects in blue. Differences between the two adjusted group-means are overlaid on a mean study-specific template. Images shown in radiological convention (right on left).
Figure 4Voxel-based morphometry results showing (top) grey matter reduction and (bottom) white matter reduction in symptomatic mutation carriers compared with control subjects. Results are shown overlaid on a mean study-specific template and are FWE-corrected for multiple comparisons. Images shown in radiological convention (right on left).
Mean ± SD diffusivity indices in the white matter tracts of interest
| Control | Presymptomatic | Symptomatic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genu of corpus callosum | 0.610 ± 0.026 | 0.621 ± 0.040 | 0.570 ± 0.010 |
| Body of corpus callosum | 0.612 ± 0.026 | 0.613 ± 0.045 | 0.559 ± 0.012 |
| Splenium of corpus callosum | 0.684 ± 0.020 | 0.691 ± 0.028 | 0.639 ± 0.020 |
| Fornix | 0.426 ± 0.044 | 0.458 ± 0.094 | 0.332 ± 0.046 |
| Right cingulum | 0.481 ± 0.033 | 0.503 ± 0.059 | 0.402 ± 0.019 |
| Left cingulum | 0.457 ± 0.035 | 0.467 ± 0.050 | 0.385 ± 0.018 |
| Genu of corpus callosum | 0.849 ± 0.043 | 0.835 ± 0.057 | 0.942 ± 0.026 |
| Body of corpus callosum | 0.858 ± 0.039 | 0.855 ± 0.052 | 0.966 ± 0.041 |
| Splenium of corpus callosum | 0.855 ± 0.040 | 0.847 ± 0.068 | 0.974 ± 0.068 |
| Fornix | 1.718 ± 0.199 | 1.642 ± 0.388 | 2.107 ± 0.147 |
| Right cingulum | 0.821 ± 0.043 | 0.776 ± 0.047 | 0.980 ± 0.049 |
| Left cingulum | 0.776 ± 0.050 | 0.752 ± 0.062 | 0.911 ± 0.040 |
| Genu of corpus callosum | 1.543 ± 0.038 | 1.528 ± 0.041 | 1.636 ± 0.031 |
| Body of corpus callosum | 1.569 ± 0.040 | 1.562 ± 0.021 | 1.661 ± 0.041 |
| Splenium of corpus callosum | 1.662 ± 0.043 | 1.653 ± 0.075 | 1.795 ± 0.078 |
| Fornix | 2.536 ± 0.188 | 2.454 ± 0.335 | 2.832 ± 0.136 |
| Right cingulum | 1.291 ± 0.046 | 1.248 ± 0.020 | 1.394 ± 0.054 |
| Left cingulum | 1.188 ± 0.049 | 1.161 ± 0.039 | 1.281 ± 0.043 |
| Genu of corpus callosum | 0.503 ± 0.048 | 0.488 ± 0.068 | 0.595 ± 0.026 |
| Body of corpus callosum | 0.503 ± 0.043 | 0.502 ± 0.069 | 0.618 ± 0.042 |
| Splenium of corpus callosum | 0.451 ± 0.041 | 0.444 ± 0.066 | 0.563 ± 0.064 |
| Fornix | 1.310 ± 0.206 | 1.236 ± 0.416 | 1.744 ± 0.155 |
| Right cingulum | 0.585 ± 0.050 | 0.540 ± 0.073 | 0.772 ± 0.048 |
| Left cingulum | 0.569 ± 0.057 | 0.547 ± 0.079 | 0.725 ± 0.043 |
The differences in adjusted means between the mutation carriers and control group (95% confidence interval) are shown in italics. Significant results at P < 0.05 are indicated by an asterisk.
Figure 5TBSS results demonstrating areas of significantly decreased fractional anisotropy and significantly increased axial, radial and mean diffusivity in symptomatic mutation carriers compared with control subjects. Results are FWE-corrected for multiple comparisons using threshold-free cluster enhancement.