| Literature DB >> 25653617 |
Milap A Nowrangi1, Paul B Rosenberg1.
Abstract
The fornix is an integral white matter bundle located in the medial diencephalon and is part of the limbic structures. It serves a vital role in memory functions and as such has become the subject of recent research emphasis in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). As the characteristic pathological processes of AD progress, structural and functional changes to the medial temporal lobes and other regions become evident years before clinical symptoms are present. Though gray matter atrophy has been the most studied, degradation of white matter structures especially the fornix may precede these and has become detectable with use of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and other complimentary imaging techniques. Recent research utilizing DTI measurement of the fornix has shown good discriminability of diagnostic groups, particularly early and preclinical, as well as predictive power for incident MCI and AD. Stimulating and modulating fornix function by the way of DBS has been an exciting new area as pharmacological therapeutics has been slow to develop.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s; DBS; DTI; MCI; fornix
Year: 2015 PMID: 25653617 PMCID: PMC4301006 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2015.00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1The fornix anatomy and DTI fornix sign. (A) Normal neuroanatomy highlighting limbic structures. (B) 1. Fornix; 2. mammilary body; 3. anterior thalamic nucleus; 4. hippocampus; 5. mammillothalamic tract; and 6. entorhinal cortex. Adapted from Nieuwenhuys (2008). (C) FA map of cognitively normal 80-year-old woman without fornix sign. (D) FA map of 80-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s disease with fornix sign. (C,D) FA maps shown with magnified view of the fornix (fuchsia rectangle), adapted from Oishi et al. (2011).
Summary of key biomarker research of the fornix in cognitively normal (NC), MCI, and AD.
| Study | Cohort | Regions of interest and imaging findings | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ringman et al. ( | 2 AD | FA for mean whole brain WM, forniceal columns, bilateral perforant pathways, left orbitofrontal lobe were decreased relative to non-carriers | FA is reduced in the fornix in persons carrying mutations for AD prior to symptoms of dementia and is a better predictor of mutation status than other regions |
| 21 at-risk AD | |||
| Mielke et al. ( | 25 NC | Lower FA in fornix, anterior cingulum bundle, splenium of the corpus collosum in AD vs. NC and AD vs. MCI | FA is decreased in specific fiber tracts including the fornix in NC, MCI, and AD and may be an indicator of progression over 3 months |
| 25 MCI | |||
| 25 AD | |||
| Nowrangi et al. ( | 25 NC | Higher MD and lower FA in the fornix and splenium in AD vs. MCI or NC of 12 months | Higher MD in the fornix longitudinally was a better indicator of change than FA and may be an early indicator of progression |
| 25 MCI | |||
| 25 AD | |||
| Huang et al. ( | 24 NC | FA, MD, DR, DA of limbic, commissural, and association tracts are differentially associated with diagnostic group. Comparison between aMCI and NC show differences only in limbic structures | WM disruption of limbic tract structures is caused by neuronal damage in aMCI and indicates a progression pattern between WM tracts |
| 11 aMCI | |||
| 26 AD | |||
| Boespflug et al. ( | 18 MCI | Lower DR, higher FA, and lower MD in the fornix associated with better paired associate learning | Disparate pathology of temporal stems and fornix WM is associated with early memory impairment in MCI |
| Oishi et al. ( | 25 NC | Fornix sign differentiated AD vs. NC and predicted conversion from NC to aMCI and from aMCI to AD | The fornix sign may be a predictive biomarker sign of AD |
| 24 aMCI | |||
| 23 AD | |||
| Van Bruggen et al. ( | 15 NC | Significant differences in FA and DR in the fornix, corpus callosum, and cingulum in MCI who remained stable vs. converters | DTI changes in MCI converters vs. those who remained stable may be an early indicator of progression to AD |
| 17 MCI (8 stable, 9 converters) | |||
| 15 AD | |||
| Douaud et al. ( | 13 aMCI (converters) | Significant group differences in volume and microstructure of left hippocampus, body of the fornix, left fibria, and superior longitudinal fasciculus | Microstructural changes in left hippocampus using DTI showed most substantial differences between two diagnostic groups and was best predictor of future progression to AD |
| 22 aMCI (stable) | |||
| Fletcher et al. ( | 102 NC | Fornix body volume and DA were highly significant predictors of cognitive decline from normal cognition | Fornix degeneration in NC may be a predictor of incipient cognitive decline among healthy elderly individuals |
| Zhuang et al. ( | 173 NC (stable) | aMCI converters had substantial reduction in FA in precuneus, parahippocampal cingulum and gyrus, and fornix while gray matter structures intact | Microstructural WM changes are present in NC in the pre-aMCI stage and may be an imaging marker of early AD-related brain changes |
| 20 aMCI (converted) | |||
| Zhuang et al. ( | 155 NC | Late aMCI had lower WM integrity in the fornix, parahippocampal cingulum, and uncinate fasciculus, early aMCI showed white matter damage in fornix | Limbic WM tracts preferentially affected in early stages of cognitive dysfunction particularly in the fornix, which may precede hippocampal atrophy |
| 27 “late” aMCI | |||
| 39 “early” aMCI |