| Literature DB >> 29668866 |
Alexandre Bejanin1,2, Renaud La Joie1, Brigitte Landeau1,2, Serge Belliard1,3, Vincent de La Sayette1,4, Francis Eustache1, Béatrice Desgranges1, Gaël Chételat1,2.
Abstract
Multimodal neuroimaging analyses offer additional information beyond that provided by each neuroimaging modality. Thus, direct comparisons and correlations between neuroimaging modalities allow revealing disease-specific topographic relationships. Here, we compared the topographic discrepancies between atrophy and hypometabolism in two neurodegenerative diseases characterized by distinct pathological processes, namely Alzheimer's disease (AD) versus semantic dementia (SD), to unravel their specific influence on local and global brain structure-function relationships. We found that intermodality topographic discrepancies clearly distinguished the two patient groups: AD showed marked discrepancies between both alterations, with greater hypometabolism than atrophy in large posterior associative neocortical regions, while SD showed more topographic consistency between atrophy and hypometabolism across brain regions. These findings likely reflect the multiple pathologies versus the relatively unitary pathological process underlying AD versus SD respectively. Our results evidence that multimodal neuroimaging-derived indexes can provide clinically relevant information to discriminate the two diseases, and potentially reveal distinct neuropathological processes.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; FDG-PET; multimodal neuroimaging; neurodegeneration; progressive Aphasia; semantic variant primary
Year: 2019 PMID: 29668866 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhy069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357