| Literature DB >> 27806705 |
Wolf-Dieter Heiss1, Gary A Rosenberg2, Alexander Thiel3, Rok Berlot4, Jacques de Reuck5.
Abstract
Imaging is critical in the diagnosis and treatment of dementia, particularly in vascular cognitive impairment, due to the visualization of ischemic and hemorrhagic injury of gray and white matter. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) provide structural and functional information. Clinical MRI is both generally available and versatile - T2-weighted images show infarcts, FLAIR shows white matter changes and lacunar infarcts, and susceptibility-weighted images reveal microbleeds. Diffusion MRI adds another dimension by showing graded damage to white matter, making it more sensitive to white matter injury than FLAIR. Regions of neuroinflammatory disruption of the blood-brain barrier with increased permeability can be quantified and visualized with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. PET shows metabolism of glucose and accumulation of amyloid and tau, which is useful in showing abnormal metabolism in Alzheimer's disease. Combining MRI and PET allows identification of patients with mixed dementia, with MRI showing white matter injury and PET demonstrating regional impairment of glucose metabolism and deposition of amyloid. Excellent anatomical detail can be observed with 7.0-Tesla MRI. Imaging is the optimal method to follow the effect of treatments since changes in MRI scans are seen prior to those in cognition. This review describes the role of various imaging modalities in the diagnosis and treatment of vascular cognitive impairment.Entities:
Keywords: CT; Cerebral small vessel disease; MRI; Molecular imaging; Neuroimaging; PET; Vascular cognitive impairment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27806705 PMCID: PMC5094143 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0725-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Typical metabolic patterns for different types of dementia compared to normal controls and vascular dementia (VD). Alzheimer’s disease (AD), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and Lewy-Body dementia (LBD) show distinct cortical patterns of decreased metabolism, while multisystem atrophy type P (MSD-P) shows a decreased metabolism in the putamen on both sides. In contrast, a typical feature of VD is the simultaneous occurrence of patchy, often asymmetrical cortical and subcortical areas of decreased glucose metabolism
Fig. 2An 82-year-old man with cognitive decline 6 months after right parietal ischemic stroke. 11-C-PIB-PET shows amyloid deposits in brain regions typical for Alzheimer’s disease, thus differentiating Alzheimer’s dementia from post-stroke dementia as a possible differential diagnosis