Neurology
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Published online before print October 21, 2009
(Neurology 2009, doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181c33afb)
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Received June 3, 2009
Accepted September 2, 2009

Regional pattern of white matter microstructural changes in normal aging, MCI, and AD

D. Y. Lee MD, PhD*, E. Fletcher PhD, O. Martinez BS, M. Ortega BS, N. Zozulya BS, J. Kim BS, J. Tran BS, M. Buonocore MD, PhD, O. Carmichael PhD, and C. DeCarli MD

From the Department of Neurology and Imaging of Dementia and Aging (IDeA) Laboratory, Center for Neuroscience (D.Y.L., E.F., O.M., M.O., N.Z., J.K., J.T., O.C., C.D.), and Department of Radiology (M.B.), University of California at Davis, CA; and the Department of Neuropsychiatry (D.Y.L.), College of Medicine, Seoul National University, Korea.


* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: selfpsy{at}snu.ac.kr.

Objective: To cross-sectionally compare the regional white matter fractional anisotropy (FA) of cognitively normal (CN) older individuals and patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer disease (AD), separately focusing on the normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and to test the independent effects of presumed degenerative and vascular process on FA differences.

Methods: Forty-seven patients with AD, 73 patients with MCI, and 95 CN subjects received diffusion tensor imaging and vascular risk evaluation. To properly control normal regional variability of FA, we divided cerebral white matter into 4 strata as measured from a series of young healthy individuals (H1 = highest; H2 = intermediate high; H3 = intermediate low; H4 = lowest anisotropy stratum).

Results: For overall cerebral white matter, patients with AD had significantly lower FA than CN individuals or patients with MCI in the regions with higher baseline anisotropy (H1, H2, and H3), corresponding to long corticocortical association fibers, but not in H4, which mostly includes heterogeneously oriented fibers. Vascular risk showed significant independent effects on FA in all strata except H1, which corresponds to the genu and splenium of the corpus callosum. Similar results were found within NAWM. FA in WMH was significantly lower than NAWM across all strata but was not associated with diagnosis or vascular risk.

Conclusions: Both vascular and Alzheimer disease degenerative process contribute to microstructural injury of cerebral white matter across the spectrum of cognitive ability and have different region-specific injury patterns.


Related Article

Exploring white matter microstructure. New insights from diffusion tensor imaging
Christopher M. Filley
Neurology 2009 0: WNL.0b013e3181c2936bv1.






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