| Literature DB >> 29998142 |
Maryam Sahebari1, Zahra Rezaieyazdi1, Mandana Khodashahi1, Bita Abbasi2, Fazlollah Ayatollahi1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease with a wide range of clinical manifestations. Cognitive dysfunction is one of the manifestations that could present prior to the emergence of any other neuropsychiatric involvements in SLE. Cognitive dysfunction is a subtle condition occurring with a high frequency. However, there is no data on the correlation of cognitive dysfunction with central nervous system (CNS) imaging findings, in particular single-photon emission computed tomography scan (SPECT) and functional MRI. We decided to perform a systematic review of brain SPECT and fMRI in SLE patients with cognitive dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive dysfunction; SPECT; Systemic lupus erythematosus; functional magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 29998142 PMCID: PMC6038975 DOI: 10.22038/aojnmb.2018.26381.1184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asia Ocean J Nucl Med Biol ISSN: 2322-5718
Quality assessment of the 14 included articles until 2017 which evaluated the role of brain SPECT and/or fMRI in cognitive dysfunction among systemic lupus eryhematosus patients
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| Driver et al. ( | Uncertain | Yes | Uncertain | 1 |
| Zhang et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Uncertain | 2 |
| DiFrancesco et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Oh DH et al.( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Shapira-Lichter et al. ( | Yes | Uncertain | Yes | 2 |
| Waterloo et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Fitzgibbon et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Nishimura et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Yes | 1 |
| Ichinose et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Sarbu et al ( | Uncertain | Yes | Yes | 2 |
| Zimmermann et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Cesar et al. ( | Uncertain | Uncertain | Uncertain | 0 |
| Piga et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | 3 |
| Al-Obaidi et al. ( | Uncertain | Yes | Uncertain | 1 |
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram of the assessed studies
Summary of the 14 articles which evaluated cognitive dysfunction in patients with neuropsychiatric systemic lupus erythematosus using brain functional MRI and/or SPECT
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| Driver et al. ( | 37 NP-SLE1 patients, 19 normal controls (mean age: 42 years) | 99mTc-ECD2 brain SPECT3 | 30 (81.1%) cases out of 37 NP-SLE patients had abnormal scans | Cognitive dysfunction | The scans revealed markedly decreased perfusion in the watershed areas of the frontal lobes bilaterally. Severe cognitive dysfunction was associated with severe perfusion deficits, compared to mild cognitive dysfunction. |
| Zhang et al. ( | 43 patients with SLE (22 cases with NP-SLE and 21 cases with non-NP-SLE) | 99mTc-ECD brain SPECT, MRI4 | 6 cases out 7NP-SLE patients with cognitive dysfunction had abnormal SPECT | Cognitive dysfunction | 19 (95.0%) out of 20 abnormal SPECT scans showed moderate to severe perfusion defect, mostly affecting multiple regions (17/20), especially in the frontal and parietal lobes and the basal ganglia (15, 11, 11, and 3 cases in the frontal, parietal, basal ganglia, and temporal lobes, respectively). In the NP-SLE patients with diffuse presentations, SPECT revealed 16/18 versus 6/18 abnormalities in MRI. |
| DiFrancesco et al. ( | 10 childhood-onset SLE patients (7 cases with cognitive dysfunction) | Brain fMRI5 | Six out of 10 childhood-onset SLE patients showed a statistically significant increased activation of brain in special areas involved in the CPT6, n-back, and verb generation tasks | Attention, working memory, and language | Language: childhood-onset lupus patientsshowed greater activation in the Broca’s area and non-activation of the Wernicke’s area. |
| Oh et al. ( | 19 SLE patients (6 cases with memory impairment) | Brain SPECT | In NP-SLE patients, 6 out of 9 regions of interest had a greater activation during working memory activity | Cognitive function and memory function | Significant hypoperfusion was observed in the right precuneus in the patients with memory impairment, which was possibly due to the association between impaired intrinsic functional connectivity in the default network and memory impairments in SLE |
| Shapira-Lichter et al. ( | 23 SLE patients (12 cases without clinically overt neuropsychiatric manifestations and 11 matched healthy controls) | fMRI | 3cases out of 12 SLE patients without overt NP symptoms complained of cognitive dysfunction manifested as a difficulty in remembering names and words | Learning and recall function | The anterior medial prefrontal cortex of the DMN7 appeared to be the only region where brain activity dynamics were altered during the learning process and within free-recall period attempts. A significantly different brain activation dynamics was demonstrated in the patients with SLE as compared to that in the healthy controls. |
| Waterloo et al. ( | 57 SLE patients | Brain SPECT and MRI | No association was detected between cognitive dysfunction and rCBF8 in NP-SLE patients | Different areas of cognition, such as memory, attention, language, visuospatial processing, psychomotor speed, and executive function | Abnormal global CBF was observed in 31 patients. 17 patients had focal lesions of reduced blood flow. 50% of the patients had generalized bilateral CBF reduction, mostly in the temporal or frontal lobes. The areas of hypoperfusion were most frequently in the frontal, temporal, and parietal regions. 31/56 patients (55 %) showed CBF global reduction of> 15%. Significantly reduced rCBF was seen in the superior part of the frontal,frontal inferior, parietal superior, parietal inferior,and temporal lobes of 32, 17, 13, 26, and 43 patients, respectively. |
| Fitzgibbon et al. ( | 27 female patients (9 SLE patients, 9 healthy controls. and 9 rheumatic arthritis controls) | Brain BOLD-fMRI9 | Greater frontoparietal activation in NP-SLE patients during the memory task | Working memory | The NP-SLE patients had greater degrees of cortical activation (i.e., increased cortical blood flow to activated areas) at six of the nine studied ROIs10 during performing the memory tasking, which was significant in three regions, namely the posterior inferior parietal lobules of both hemispheres separately and combined and supplementary motor area (mid-line frontal lobe). |
| Nishimura et al. ( | 43 corticosteroid-naive patients with SLE | MRI and EEG | 16.7% and 41.7% of the patients with NIC hadabnormal brain MRI and EEG, respectively | NCI | Patients with SLE had lower scores than the control subjects for RAVLT trials, reflecting immediate recall and psychomotor speed. Lower psychomotor speed was concluded to result from reduction in corpus callosum volume or other white matter abnormalities. |
| Ichinose et al. ( | 32 NP-SLE patients | MRI | 17 (53.1%) cases out of 32 patients had abnormal MRI findings | NCI | Cytokines/chemokines were significantly higher in the NPSLE patients, compared to the MS/NMO patients. |
| Sarbu et al. ( | 108 patients with neuropsychiatric lupus | MRI | Brain abnormalities were detectedin 59.3% of the patients | Cognitive dysfunction | Approximately, WMH, especially in frontal and parieto-occipital regions, was observed in half of the patients; however, only focal WMH with low lesion burden was observed in patients with normal MRI. |
| Zimmermann et | 40 patients with SLE | MRI and fMRI | 47% of the patients had abnormal MRI findings | Cognitive dysfunction | A decreased volume was reported in the left hippocampus, amygdala, and the right hippocampus in the SLE patients with cognitive dysfunction. |
| Cesar et al. ( | 23 patients with neuropsychiatric systemic lupus | MRI | --- | Cognitive dysfunction | Increased T2 lesion number and volume as well as greater lesion attenuation in the left superior and a small portion of the right posterior corona radiata were observed in the patients with NPSLE. |
| Piga et al. ( | 30 patients with longstanding SLE | MRI and fMRI | 53.3% of the patients had MRI abnormalities, and 80% of them showed abnormalities in the follow-up MRI | Cognitive dysfunction | mMSS, cerebral volume loss, and new ischemic parenchymal lesions were observed in some cases. |
| Al-Obaidi et al. ( | 27 Childrenwith NP-SLE | MRI | Cognitive dysfunction was observed in 14.8% of the patients | Cognitive dysfunction and anxiety disorder | The majority of the patients had no MRI abnormalities despite the signs and symptoms of active NPSLE. T2-weighted imaging showed cortical grey matter lesions, brain atrophy, basilar artery territory infarction, and focal white matter hyperintensities in some cases. |
NP-SLE= Neuropsychiatric systematic lupus erythematous; ECD= ethyl cysteinate dimer; CPT= Continuous performance task; NMO= Neuromyelitis optica; DMN= Default mode network; rCBF= Regional cerebral blood flow; BOLD-fMRI= blood-oxygen-level-dependent functional MRI; ROIs= Regions of interest; NIC= Neurocognitive impairment; mMSS= Modified MRI scoring system; NCI= Neurocognitive impairment; RAVLT= Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test