Functional compensation in incipient Alzheimer's disease
Received 12 November 2007; received in revised form 27 March 2008; accepted 1 May 2008. published online 16 June 2008.
Abstract
Aim of this study was to investigate the functional compensation mechanism in incipient Alzheimer's disease (AD). Seventeen elderly healthy subjects and nine amnestic MCI patients with incipient AD underwent brain MR scan and 99mTc ECD SPECT. We processed all images with SPM2, we created t maps, showing the wholebrain GM atrophy and functional changes, and we properly masked them with each other in order to assess relatively preserved perfusion or depression. Incipient AD showed GM atrophy in the medial temporal and temporoparietal lobes, in the insula and in the retrosplenial cortex, and GM hypoperfusion in the medial temporal and temporoparietal lobes. Relatively preserved perfusion, we could hypothesize to be compensatory in the setting of neuronal loss, was found in the posterior cingulate, in the head of the hippocampus, in the amigdala, and in the insula bilaterally, while functional depression occurred in bilateral parahippocampal gyri. In AD, a perfusional compensatory mechanism takes place in the neocortex, while perfusional depression occurs in the medial temporal lobe. These results help understand the reactive phenomena induced by the brain to try and counteract the pathological changes of AD.
aLENITEM Laboratory of Epidemiology, Neuroimaging, and Telemedicine, IRCCS San Giovanni di Dio-FBF, Brescia, Italy
bMedical Imaging Unit, Biomedical Engineering Department, Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, Bergamo, Italy
cPsychogeriatrics Unit, IRCCS San Giovanni di Dio-FBF, Brescia, Italy
dDivision of Clinical Neurophysiology, Department of Endocrinological and Medical Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy
eDepartment of Nuclear Medicine, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
fDepartment of Nuclear Medicine, Ospedali Riuniti, Bergamo, Italy
gNeuroradiology Service, Clinical Institute Città di Brescia, Brescia, Italy
hAFaR Associazione Fatebenefratelli per la Ricerca, Rome, Italy
Corresponding author at: Laboratory of Epidemiology, Neuroimaging and Telemedicine, IRCCS San Giovanni di Dio-FBF, via Pilastroni 4, 25125 Brescia, Italy. Tel.: +39 030 3501361; fax: +39 02 700435727.