| Literature DB >> 26801955 |
Owen R Phillips1,2, Shantanu H Joshi3, Fabrizio Piras4,5, Maria Donata Orfei5, Mariangela Iorio5, Katherine L Narr3, David W Shattuck3, Carlo Caltagirone2,6, Gianfranco Spalletta5, Margherita Di Paola1,7.
Abstract
White matter abnormalities have been shown in the large deep fibers of Alzheimer's disease patients. However, the late myelinating superficial white matter comprised of intracortical myelin and short-range association fibers has not received much attention. To investigate this area, we extracted a surface corresponding to the superficial white matter beneath the cortex and then applied a cortical pattern-matching approach which allowed us to register and subsequently sample diffusivity along thousands of points at the interface between the gray matter and white matter in 44 patients with Alzheimer's disease (Age: 71.02 ± 5.84, 16M/28F) and 47 healthy controls (Age 69.23 ± 4.45, 19M/28F). In patients we found an overall increase in the axial and radial diffusivity across most of the superficial white matter (P < 0.001) with increases in diffusivity of more than 20% in the bilateral parahippocampal regions and the temporal and frontal lobes. Furthermore, diffusivity correlated with the cognitive deficits measured by the Mini-Mental State Examination scores (P < 0.001). The superficial white matter has a unique microstructure and is critical for the integration of multimodal information during brain maturation and aging. Here we show that there are major abnormalities in patients and the deterioration of these fibers relates to clinical symptoms in Alzheimer's disease.Entities:
Keywords: DTI; U-fibers; diffusion; interstitial neurons; intracortical myelin; neurodegeneration; oligodendrocytes; short-range association fibers; white matter
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26801955 PMCID: PMC5125444 DOI: 10.1002/hbm.23105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Brain Mapp ISSN: 1065-9471 Impact factor: 5.038