| Literature DB >> 25862483 |
Tarun D Singh1, Keith A Josephs, Mary M Machulda, Daniel A Drubach, Liana G Apostolova, Val J Lowe, Jennifer L Whitwell.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to identify the clinical, [(18)F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and amyloid-PET findings in a large cohort of posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) patients, to examine the neural correlates of the classic features of PCA, and to better understand the features associated with early PCA. We prospectively recruited 25 patients who presented to the Mayo Clinic between March 2013 and August 2014 and met diagnostic criteria for PCA. All patients underwent a standardized set of tests and amyloid imaging with [(11)C] Pittsburg compound B (PiB). Seventeen (68 %) underwent FDG-PET scanning. We divided the cohort at the median disease duration of 4 years in order to assess clinical and FDG-PET correlates of early PCA (n = 13). The most common clinical features were simultanagnosia (92 %), dysgraphia (68 %), poly-mini-myoclonus (64 %) and oculomotor apraxia (56.5 %). On FDG-PET, hypometabolism was observed bilaterally in the lateral and medial parietal and occipital lobes. Simultanagnosia was associated with hypometabolism in the right occipital lobe and posterior cingulum, optic ataxia with hypometabolism in left occipital lobe, and oculomotor apraxia with hypometabolism in the left parietal lobe and posterior cingulate gyrus. All 25 PCA patients were amyloid positive. Simultanagnosia was the only feature present in 85 % of early PCA patients. The syndrome of PCA is associated with posterior hemisphere hypometabolism and with amyloid deposition. Many of the classic features of PCA show associated focal, but not widespread, areas of involvement of these posterior hemispheric regions. Simultanagnosia appears to be the most common and hence sensitive feature of early PCA.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25862483 PMCID: PMC4469094 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-015-7732-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Examples of handwriting from three PCA patients. Note abnormally formed letters, abnormal spacing, and variations in letter size, consistent with apraxic dysgraphia
Demographic features of the PCA cohort
| Demographics | Entire PCA cohort ( | Early PCA ( |
|---|---|---|
| Males | 12 (48 %) | 7 (53.9 %) |
| Right handedness | 24 (96 %) | 12 (92.3 %) |
| Age of onset (years) | 60 (54–63) | 59 (54–62.5) |
| Age at evaluation (years) | 64 (58–70) | 61 (56.5–65.5) |
| Illness duration (years) | 4 (3–7) | 3 (2.5–4) |
| Education | 16 (13–18) | 14 (12–16) |
| Race (Caucasian) | 25 (100 %) | 13 (100 %) |
Data expressed as n (%) or median (IQR)
Clinical and neurological features of the PCA cohort
| Entire PCA cohort ( | Early PCA ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical features (present/absent) | ||
| Simultanagnosia | 23 (92 %) | 11 (85 %) |
| Dysgraphia | 17 (68 %) | 9 (69.2 %) |
| Poly-mini-myoclonus | 16 (64 %) | 9 (69.2 %) |
| Oculomotor apraxia | 13 (56.5 %) | 6 (54.6 %) |
| Anomia | 8 (34.8 %) | 3 (23.1 %) |
| Optic ataxia | 8 (34.8 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Visual hallucinations | 5 (20 %) | 3 (23.1 %) |
| REM sleep behavior disorder | 4 (16 %) | 3 (23.1 %) |
| Neurological test scores | ||
| MMSE (/30) | 25 (20–28) | 26 (24–29) |
| FAB (/18) | 14 (11–16) | 15 (12–15.5) |
| FBI (/72) | 12 (8–18.5) | 11 (5.5–17.5) |
| WAB apraxia (/60) | 55 (52–59) | 56 (53–58.5) |
| MDS-UPDRS I (/52) | 7 (5.5–10.5) | 7 (5.5–9.5) |
| MDS-UPDRS II (/52) | 6 (1.5–1.3) | 4 (1–7) |
| MDS-UPDRS III (/132) | 2 (0.5–4) | 2 (0.5–3) |
| CDR sum of boxes (/18) | 3.5 (2–6.8) | 2.5 (1.8–4) |
| NPI total score (/36) | 4 (2–6) | 4 (2.5–5.5) |
| Boston naming test (/15) | 13 (10–14) | 13 (11–15) |
| Famous face recognition (/10) | 9 (7–10) | 10 (9–10) |
| Calculations (/5) | 2 (0–3) | 2 (0.5–3) |
| Ishihara (6 plates) | 0 (0–2) | 1.5 (0–3) |
Data as (%) or median (IQR)
Z scores of hypometabolic patterns in PCA
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| Posterior cingulate, L | 1.87 | 6 (35.3) |
| Posterior cingulate, R | 1.80 | 8 (47.1) |
| Frontal lobe, L | 1.79 | 6 (35.3) |
| Visual cortex, R | 1.64 | 6 (35.3) |
| Visual cortex, L | 1.49 | 5 (29.4) |
| Frontal lobe, R | 1.38 | 6 (35.3) |
| Medial frontal, L | 1.16 | 0 (0) |
| Anterior cingulate, R | 0.98 | 0 (0) |
| Medial frontal, R | 0.97 | 0 (0) |
| Anterior cingulate, L | 0.76 | 0 (0) |
Values are ordered from most affected to least affected. Bold and italicized values represent degree of severity (>3.00 = severe, 2.00–3.00 = moderate, 1–1.99 = mild)
Fig. 2Three-dimensional brain renderings showing FDG-PET hypometabolism in the entire PCA cohort compared to controls (a), the early PCA subjects compared to controls (b), and early PCA compared to the rest of the PCA patients (c). Renders were generated using the BrainNet Viewer (http://www.nitrc.org/projects/bnv/)
Fig. 3Three-dimensional brain renderings showing PiB-PET uptake in the entire PCA cohort compared to controls. Renders were generated using the BrainNet Viewer (http://www.nitrc.org/projects/bnv/)