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1.
Tijdschr Psychiatr ; 65(4): 272-277, 2023.
Artigo em Holandês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37323048

RESUMO

A 47-year-old highly educated man without psychiatric history was referred for psychiatric evaluation because of persistent subjective cognitive decline after repeated and extensive diagnostic evaluation in an outpatient memory clinic. The patient developed increasing preoccupation and anxiety with memory complaints and concerns, despite repetitive negative findings from clinical investigations. This clinical case is coined as ‘neurocognitive hypochondria’, a syndrome interfacing with cogniform and illness anxiety disorders, in which obsessions and concerns about progression of unexplained memory deficits are indicated for specialized treatment. This case study provides more insight into differential diagnosis, classification according to the current DSM-5 criteria and discussion on potential treatment approaches.


Assuntos
Disfunção Cognitiva , Masculino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Disfunção Cognitiva/diagnóstico , Disfunção Cognitiva/terapia , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Ansiedade , Transtornos de Ansiedade , Transtornos da Memória , Testes Neuropsicológicos
2.
Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ; 48(3): 747-756, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32888039

RESUMO

PURPOSE: To determine thresholds for amyloid beta pathology and evaluate associations with longitudinal memory performance with the aim to identify a grey zone of early amyloid beta accumulation and investigate its clinical relevance. METHODS: We included 162 cognitively normal participants with subjective cognitive decline from the SCIENCe cohort (64 ± 8 years, 38% F, MMSE 29 ± 1). Each underwent a dynamic [18F] florbetapir PET scan, a T1-weighted MRI scan and longitudinal memory assessments (RAVLT delayed recall, n = 655 examinations). PET scans were visually assessed as amyloid positive/negative. Additionally, we calculated the mean binding potential (BPND) and standardized uptake value ratio (SUVr50-70) for an a priori defined composite region of interest. We determined six amyloid positivity thresholds using various data-driven methods (resulting thresholds: BPND 0.19/0.23/0.29; SUVr 1.28/1.34/1.43). We used Cohen's kappa to analyse concordance between thresholds and visual assessment. Next, we used quantiles to divide the sample into two to five subgroups of equal numbers (median, tertiles, quartiles, quintiles), and operationalized a grey zone as the range between the thresholds (0.19-0.29 BPND/1.28-1.43 SUVr). We used linear mixed models to determine associations between thresholds and memory slope. RESULTS: As determined by visual assessment, 24% of 162 individuals were amyloid positive. Concordance with visual assessment was comparable but slightly higher for BPND thresholds (range kappa 0.65-0.70 versus 0.60-0.63). All thresholds predicted memory decline (range beta - 0.29 to - 0.21, all p < 0.05). Analyses in subgroups showed memory slopes gradually became steeper with higher amyloid load (all p for trend < 0.05). Participants with a low amyloid burden benefited from a practice effect (i.e. increase in memory), whilst high amyloid burden was associated with memory decline. Memory slopes of individuals in the grey zone were intermediate. CONCLUSION: We provide evidence that not only high but also grey zone amyloid burden subtly impacts memory function. Therefore, in case a binary classification is required, we suggest using a relatively low threshold which includes grey zone amyloid pathology.


Assuntos
Doença de Alzheimer , Amiloide , Disfunção Cognitiva , Idoso , Peptídeos beta-Amiloides , Compostos de Anilina , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Tomografia por Emissão de Pósitrons
3.
Neuroimage Clin ; 28: 102504, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33395993

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Alpha-synuclein often co-occurs with Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). From a dynamic [18F]flortaucipir PET scan we derived measures of both tau binding and relative cerebral blood flow (rCBF). We tested whether regional tau binding or rCBF differed between DLB patients and AD patients and controls and examined their association with clinical characteristics of DLB. METHODS: Eighteen patients with probable DLB, 65 AD patients and 50 controls underwent a dynamic 130-minute [18F]flortaucipir PET scan. DLB patients with positive biomarkers for AD based on cerebrospinal fluid or amyloid PET were considered as DLB with AD pathology (DLB-AD+). Receptor parametric mapping (cerebellar gray matter reference region) was used to extract regional binding potential (BPND) and R1, reflecting (AD-specific) tau pathology and rCBF, respectively. First, we performed regional comparisons of [18F]flortaucipir BPND and R1 between diagnostic groups. In DLB patients only, we performed regression analyses between regional [18F]flortaucipir BPND, R1 and performance on ten neuropsychological tests. RESULTS: Regional [18F]flortaucipir BPND in DLB was comparable with tau binding in controls (p > 0.05). Subtle higher tau binding was observed in DLB-AD+ compared to DLB-AD- in the medial temporal and parietal lobe (both p < 0.05). Occipital and lateral parietal R1 was lower in DLB compared to AD and controls (all p < 0.01). Lower frontal R1 was associated with impaired performance on digit span forward (standardized beta, stß = 0.72) and category fluency (stß = 0.69) tests. Lower parietal R1 was related to lower delayed (stß = 0.50) and immediate (stß = 0.48) recall, VOSP number location (stß = 0.70) and fragmented letters (stß = 0.59) scores. Lower occipital R1 was associated to worse performance on VOSP fragmented letters (stß = 0.61), all p < 0.05. CONCLUSION: The amount of tau binding in DLB was minimal and did not differ from controls. However, there were DLB-specific occipital and lateral parietal relative cerebral blood flow reductions compared to both controls and AD patients. Regional rCBF, but not tau binding, was related to cognitive impairment. This indicates that assessment of rCBF may give more insight into disease mechanisms in DLB than tau PET.


Assuntos
Doença de Alzheimer , Disfunção Cognitiva , Doença por Corpos de Lewy , Doença de Alzheimer/diagnóstico por imagem , Circulação Cerebrovascular , Humanos , Doença por Corpos de Lewy/diagnóstico por imagem , Tomografia por Emissão de Pósitrons , Proteínas tau
4.
Neuroimage ; 61(4): 1484-94, 2012 Jul 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22484407

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Brain atrophy studies often use FSL-BET (Brain Extraction Tool) as the first step of image processing. Default BET does not always give satisfactory results on 3DT1 MR images, which negatively impacts atrophy measurements. Finding the right alternative BET settings can be a difficult and time-consuming task, which can introduce unwanted variability. AIM: To systematically analyze the performance of BET in images of MS patients by varying its parameters and options combinations, and quantitatively comparing its results to a manual gold standard. METHODS: Images from 159 MS patients were selected from different MAGNIMS consortium centers, and 16 different 3DT1 acquisition protocols at 1.5 T or 3T. Before running BET, one of three pre-processing pipelines was applied: (1) no pre-processing, (2) removal of neck slices, or (3) additional N3 inhomogeneity correction. Then BET was applied, systematically varying the fractional intensity threshold (the "f" parameter) and with either one of the main BET options ("B" - bias field correction and neck cleanup, "R" - robust brain center estimation, or "S" - eye and optic nerve cleanup) or none. For comparison, intracranial cavity masks were manually created for all image volumes. FSL-FAST (FMRIB's Automated Segmentation Tool) tissue-type segmentation was run on all BET output images and on the image volumes masked with the manual intracranial cavity masks (thus creating the gold-standard tissue masks). The resulting brain tissue masks were quantitatively compared to the gold standard using Dice overlap coefficient (DOC). Normalized brain volumes (NBV) were calculated with SIENAX. NBV values obtained using for SIENAX other BET settings than default were compared to gold standard NBV with the paired t-test. RESULTS: The parameter/preprocessing/options combinations resulted in 20,988 BET runs. The median DOC for default BET (f=0.5, g=0) was 0.913 (range 0.321-0.977) across all 159 native scans. For all acquisition protocols, brain extraction was substantially improved for lower values of "f" than the default value. Using native images, optimum BET performance was observed for f=0.2 with option "B", giving median DOC=0.979 (range 0.867-0.994). Using neck removal before BET, optimum BET performance was observed for f=0.1 with option "B", giving median DOC 0.983 (range 0.844-0.996). Using the above BET-options for SIENAX instead of default, the NBV values obtained from images after neck removal with f=0.1 and option "B" did not differ statistically from NBV values obtained with gold-standard. CONCLUSION: Although default BET performs reasonably well on most 3DT1 images of MS patients, the performance can be improved substantially. The removal of the neck slices, either externally or within BET, has a marked positive effect on the brain extraction quality. BET option "B" with f=0.1 after removal of the neck slices seems to work best for all acquisition protocols.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/patologia , Interpretação de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Esclerose Múltipla/patologia , Adulto , Atrofia/patologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade
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