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Imaging in Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias, An Issue of Neuroimaging Clinics - E-Book

Imaging in Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias, An Issue of Neuroimaging Clinics - E-Book

Alison D. Murray

(2012)

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Book Details

Abstract

Dementia is a massive and increasing global problem, with the current prevalence anticipated to double every 20 years as people live longer. Neuroimaging in dementia is recommended by most clinical guidelines and its role has traditionally been to exclude a mass lesion, rather than to support a specific diagnosis. All radiologists will be aware of a steady rise in the number of requests for brain imaging in old people, but what can imaging reliably tell us and what kind of imaging should we use? In affluent societies we now have a range of structural and molecular brain imaging techniques at our disposal, with specific ligands and sophisticated image analysis techniques now available for clinical use. However, we have difficulty justifying which patients to scan, using which modality and when. We know that Alzheimer’s disease is the most common neuropathology contributing to a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease but we also know from large post-mortem studies that most brain pathology in those who have died with a diagnosis of dementia is mixed. Thus understanding different diseases that can cause dementia, how these co-exist or interact and appreciating that not all dementia is Alzheimer’s disease is important.  Equally important is awareness of individual differences in response to a neuropathological burden and what factors provide resilience against dementia that might be maximized to reduce or postpone its impact. This issue draws together contributions from experts in their fields to provide clarity to the topic in a comprehensive collection of articles.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Front Cover Cover
Imaging in Alzheimer’s\rDisease and Other\rDementias i
Copyright Page ii
Table of Contents vii
Contributors v
Foreword xi
Preface xiii
Chapter 1. Spatial Distributionand Secular Trendsin the Epidemiologyof Alzheimer’s Disease 1
DEMENTIA DIAGNOSIS AND CLASSIFICATION 2
THE GEOGRAPHY OF DEMENTIA 3
SECULAR TRENDS IN THE INCIDENCE OF DEMENTIA 5
COULD NUTRITION EXPLAIN VARIATION IN DEMENTIA INCIDENCE? 6
SYNTHESIS 7
REFERENCES 8
Chapter 2. The Molecular Pathology of Alzheimer’s Disease 11
TAU PROTEIN PATHOLOGY IN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE 12
β-AMYLOID PATHOLOGY AND MOLECULARGENETICS OF ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE 17
CONNECTIONS BETWEEN AMYLOID AND TAUPATHOLOGY 19
FUTURE DIRECTIONS 19
REFERENCES 20
Chapter 3. Clinical and Research Diagnostic Criteria for Alzheimer’s Disease 23
NEW CONCEPTS FOR THE CLINICALDEFINITION OF ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE 23
IDENTIFICATION OF THE CLINICALSYMPTOMS OF AD AT AN EARLY STAGE 24
BIOMARKERS OF AD 25
INCORPORATING NEW TOOLS FOR THEDIAGNOSIS OF AD: THE NEW AD CRITERIA 28
REFERENCES 30
Chapter 4. Structural Neuroimaging in Aging and Alzheimer’s Disease 33
PART I: STRUCTURAL IMAGING IN AGING 33
EPVSs 41
PART II: STRUCTURAL NEUROIMAGING IN AD 42
PCA 47
LPA 48
REFERENCES 52
Chapter 5. Molecular Neuroimaging in Alzheimer’s Disease 57
PiB-PET IMAGE ANALYSIS 58
PiB-PET IN NORMAL CONTROLS 59
PiB-PET IN MCI 62
PiB-PET IN AD 63
SUMMARY 63
REFERENCES 64
Chapter 6. Neuroimaging of Dementia with Lewy Bodies 67
HISTORY 67
CLINICAL CHARACTERIZATION 67
DIAGNOSIS OF DEMENTIA WITH LBS VERSUS PD WITH DEMENTIA 69
NEUROIMAGING IN DLB 69
DIAGNOSIS OF DLB VERSUS AD 69
STRUCTURAL MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING 69
DIFFUSION MR 73
MR SPECTROSCOPY 73
FUNCTIONAL IMAGING OF BRAIN ACTIVITYIN DLB 74
PERFUSION/METABOLISM IMAGING 74
DOPAMINERGIC IMAGING 75
CHOLINERGIC IMAGING 76
CARDIAC IMAGING 77
SUMMARY 77
AMYLOID IMAGING 77
REFERENCES 77
Chapter 7. Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration: New Understanding BringsNew Approaches 83
FTLD: A FAMILY OF SYNDROMES 83
FTLD: UNDERSTANDING THE SYNDROME-PATHOLOGY RELATIONSHIP 86
GENETICS OF FTLD 87
IMAGING FTLD AND THE PATHOLOGIC SUBSTRATES 88
SUMMARY 92
SUMMARY CONCEPTS 93
REFERENCES 93
Chapter 8. Reserve, Brain Changes, and Decline 99
A BRIEF HISTORY OF RESERVE 99
RESERVE MODELS 100
ACQUIRING RESERVE GENETICALLY 101
ACQUIRING RESERVE ENVIRONMENTALLY 102
TESTING AND MEASURING RESERVE 103
SUMMARY 103
REFERENCES 103
Chapter 9. The Clinical Value of Large Neuroimaging Data Sets in Alzheimer’s Disease 107
NEW ERA OF COLLABORATIVE,INTERDISCIPLINARY TEAM SCIENCE 107
IMPACT OF KEY AREAS OF E-SCIENCE ON NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROLOGY 108
ADNI 109
DATA INTEGRATION 111
INFRASTRUCTURE MECHANICS 111
PET 115
SUMMARY 115
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 115
REFERENCES 116
Index 119