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ABSTRACT: Hippocampus volumetry is a useful surrogate marker for the diagnosis of Alzheimer disease, but it seems insufficiently sensitive for the aMCI stage. We postulated that some hippocampus subfields are specifically atrophic in aMCI and that measuring hippocampus subfield volumes will improve sensitivity of MR imaging to detect aMCI.
We evaluated episodic memory and hippocampus subfield volume in 15 patients with aMCI and 15 matched controls. After segmentation of the whole hippocampus from clinical MR imaging, we applied a new computational method allowing fully automated segmentation of the hippocampus subfields. This method used a Bayesian modeling approach to infer segmentations from the imaging data.
In comparison with controls, subiculum and CA2-3 were significantly atrophic in patients with aMCI, whereas total hippocampus volume and other subfields were not. Total hippocampus volume in controls was age-related, whereas episodic memory was the main explanatory variable for both the total hippocampus volume and the subfields that were atrophic in patients with aMCI. Segmenting subfields increases sensitivity to diagnose aMCI from 40% to 73%.
Measuring CA2-3 and subiculum volumes allows a better detection of aMCI.
American Journal of Neuroradiology 08/2011; 32(9):1658-61. · 2.93 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Lyme disease is a multisystemic disorder caused by an epizootic organism of the spirochete group, called Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), which is transmitted to humans by ticks of the genus Ixodes. Lyme neuroborreliosis may occur during the early dissemination phase, most often as a painful meningo-radiculitis and very rarely as a radiculo-myelitis, whereas encephalomyelitis is observed in the late phase. We report the case of a patient with an early subacute poliomyelitis-like syndrome closely matching the selective involvement of the anterior horns and roots of the cervical spinal cord seen on magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. This condition improved with appropriate antibiotics.
Case Reports 01/2009; 2009.
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ABSTRACT: Lyme disease is a multisystemic disorder caused by an epizootic organism of the spirochete group, called Borrelia burgdorferi, which is transmitted to humans by ticks of the genus Ixodes. Lyme neuroborreliosis may occur during the early dissemination phase, most often as a painful meningo-radiculitis and very rarely as a radiculo-myelitis, whereas encephalomyelitis is observed in the late phase. We report the case of a patient with an early subacute poliomyelitis-like syndrome closely matching the selective involvement of the anterior horns and roots of the cervical spinal cord seen on magnetic resonance imaging. This condition improved with appropriate antibiotics.
Case Reports 01/2009; 2009.
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Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 11/2007; 78(10):1160-1. · 4.87 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to evaluate the discriminant validity of the RI-48 test, a shorter French version of the Category Cued Recall portion of the Double Memory Test developed initially by Buschke and colleagues (1997), in the diagnosis of mild and very mild Alzheimer disease (AD). The distinctive feature of the RI-48 task is that encoding specificity was increased by adding an immediate cued recall stage at the encoding phase. The results show that the RI-48 task seems to be well adapted to the clinical context and to have good psychometric properties, in particular a lack of a ceiling effect. Moreover, this task appears to be especially well suited for the diagnosis of both mild and very mild AD (sensitivity of 93% and 83.8%). From a more theoretical point of view, this study confirms the importance of optimizing the encoding specificity for the diagnosis of very mild AD, since the more encoding specificity is accentuated, the more discriminating power is increased for the diagnosis of very mild AD.
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 08/2007; 29(5):477-87. · 2.13 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Transient neuroimaging features indicating primary cortical and secondary subcortical white matter cytotoxic oedema have been described in association with prolonged or intense seizures. We describe the unusual condition of recurrent ictal cortical blindness due to focal occipital status epilepticus, in the context of chronic hepatic failure. There was a close association between the onset and disappearance of clinical, electrophysiological and magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities.
Acta neurologica Belgica 01/2007; 106(4):215-8. · 0.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Hypothyroidism is often associated with defective memory, psychomotor slowing, and depression. However, the relationship between thyroid status and cognitive or psychiatric disturbances remains unclear. Using psychometric scales, 10 patients who had undergone total thyroidectomy for thyroid carcinoma were evaluated for depression, anxiety, and psychomotor slowing; they were examined both when euthyroid and hypothyroid after thyroid hormone withdrawal. Positron emission tomography was used, with oxygen-15-labeled water and fluorine-18F-labeled 2-deoxy-2fluoro-D-glucose as the tracers, to correlate the regional cerebral blood flow and cerebral glucose metabolism with the mental state in patients. Two different image analysis techniques (regions of interest and statistical parametric maps) were applied. In hypothyroidism, there was a generalized decrease in regional cerebral blood flow (23.4%, P < 0.001) and in cerebral glucose metabolism (12.1%, P < 0.001) and there were no specific local defects. Patients were also significantly more depressed (P < 0.001), anxious (P < 0.001) and psychomotor slowed (P < 0.005) in hypo than in euthyroid status. These results indicate that the brain activity was globally reduced in severe hypothyroidism of short duration without the regional modifications usually observed in primary depression.
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 08/2001; 86(8):3864-70. · 6.50 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This study explored the ability of a severe amnesic patient (AC) to acquire new vocabulary words. We compared AC's knowledge of words entered into the French lexicon during three different periods: before 1920, between 1965 and 1985, and after 1986 (i.e. after the onset of his amnesia). AC's knowledge was assessed by asking him to give, for each word, its definition (word-definition task), the general domain to which the word belonged ("domain" task), and to generate a sentence containing the word (sentence-generation task). Finally, we administered a recognition task in which AC had to select, for each word, its correct definition amongst four definitions. For all of these tasks, the results showed that AC's performance was similar to that of four control subjects matched for age, education, and profession. In particular, there was no difference with regard to AC's knowledge of words entered into the language after the onset of his amnesia. Therefore, these results indicate that, despite his profound amnesia, AC was able to learn normally new vocabulary words. More generally, they confirm that, at least is some cases, semantic learning can be spared in amnesia.
Neurocase 02/2001; 7(4):283-93. · 1.11 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and metabolic rate for glucose (rCMRGlc) are associated with functional activity of the neural cells. The present work reports a comparison study between rCBF and rCMRGlc in a normal population as a function of age. 10 young (25.9+/-5.6 years) and 10 old (65.4+/-6.1 years) volunteers were similarly studied at rest. In each subject, rCBF and rCMRGlc were measured in sequence, during the same session. Both rCBF and rCMRGlc values were found to decrease from young (mean rCBF=43.7 ml/100 g per min; mean rCMRGlc=40.6 micromol/100 g per min) to old age (mean rCBF=37.3 ml/100 g per min; mean rCMRGlc=35.2 micromol/100 g per min), resulting in a drop over 40 years of 14.8% (0.37%/year) and 13.3% (0.34%/year), respectively. On a regional basis, the frontal and the visual cortices were observed to have, respectively, the highest and the lowest reduction in rCBF, while, for rCMRGlc, these extremes were observed in striatum and cerebellum. Despite these differences, the ratio of rCBF to rCMRGlc was found to have a similar behavior in all brain regions for young and old subjects as shown by a correlation coefficient of 88%. This comparative study indicates a decline in rCBF and rCMRGlc values and a coupling between CBF and CMRGlc as a function of age.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences 01/2001; 181(1-2):19-28. · 2.35 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Quantitative estimation of brain glucose metabolism (rCMRGlc) with positron emission tomography and fluorodeoxyglucose involves arterial blood sampling to estimate the delivery of radioactivity to the brain. Usually, for an intravenous injection of 30 s duration, an accurate input curve requires a frequency of one sample every 5 s or less to determine the peak activity in arterial plasma during the first 2 min after injection. In this work, 13 standardized sampling times were shown to be sufficient to accurately define the input curve. This standardized input curve was subsequently fitted by a polynomial function for its rising part and by spectral analysis for its decreasing part. Using the measured, the standardized, and the fitted input curves, rCMRGlc was estimated in 32 cerebral regions of interest in 20 normal volunteers. Comparison of rCMRGlc values obtained with the measured and the fitted input curves showed that both procedures gave consistent results, with a maximal relative error in mean rCMRGlc of 1% when using the autoradiographic method and 2% using kinetic analysis of dynamic data. This input-curve-fitting technique, which is not dependent on the peak time occurrence, allows an accurate determination of the input-curve shape from reduced sampling schemes.
IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging 06/1999; 18(5):379-84. · 3.64 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The responsibility of cerebral cholinergic lesions for the weak clinical response to cholinergic neurotransmission enhancement of Alzheimer's disease (AD) was studied by measuring the effects of physostigmine on glucose consumption and neuropsychological tests. Ten AD and ten aged normals (AN) were examined twice, under placebo and under maximal tolerated dose of physostigmine, in randomized order and blind fashion. Under physostigmine, both groups showed better performances in tests measuring attention (P < 0.05-0.001) but not long-term memory, and cerebral glucose consumption was regionally modified (P < 0.0001). We observed a regional decrease in AD and in AN which was larger in AD, where each patient exhibited a mean metabolic decrease. With normalized values, AD and AN showed a similar decrease in the metabolic values of prefrontal cortex and striatum (P = 0.0003). These findings suggest that cholinergic neurotransmission enhancement depresses glucose consumption and increases selective attention in similar ways in both groups, but to a larger extent in AD. This suggests that brain metabolism in AD over-responds to enhancement of cholinergic neurotransmission. The observed weak response of clinical symptomatology to anticholinesterase agents does not appear to be due to the failure to enhance the activity of the cholinergic system in AD.
Psychopharmacologia 04/1998; 136(3):256-63. · 4.08 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and glucose consumption (GC) are both tracers of brain metabolic activity used to image the human brain in vivo. To know if both tracers reacted in the same manner when brain cholinergic neurotransmission was activated, CBF and GC were measured in young normals (YN), aged normals (AN), and Alzheimer's Disease patients (AD) using positron emission tomography (PET), H2 15O, and 18F-FDG. Each subject was studied twice, under placebo and physostigmine, in randomized order and blind fashion using the maximal tolerated dose of physostigmine individually determined. Under physostigmine CBF increased significantly (P = 0.0007) in posterior regions of the cerebral cortex and in the subcortical structures. Inversely, GC was decreased significantly in most regions. The largest decrease was seen in the prefrontal region of the cerebral cortex (P < 0.0001). Significant regional decreases were registered in all three groups of subjects, but were larger in AD than in controls. Looking at the absolute values of prefrontal cortex metabolism we found no correlation (r = 0.04) between the responses of CBF and GC. After normalization of the regional values for the mean we found a significant positive correlation between the responses of CBF and GC (r = 0.71, P < 0.0001). These findings suggest two components in the CBF response to physostigmine: one metabolic, depressive, and regional which follows the GC response; and one vascular, larger, diffuse, and opposite in direction to the metabolic component. These results have implications for the interpretation of CBF values as tracer of brain metabolic activity when brain cholinergic neurotransmission is manipulated.
NeuroImage 11/1997; 6(4):335-43. · 5.89 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and glucose consumption (GC) are both tracers of brain metabolic activity used to image the human brainin vivo.To know if both tracers reacted in the same manner when brain cholinergic neurotransmission was activated, CBF and GC were measured in young normals (YN), aged normals (AN), and Alzheimer's Disease patients (AD) using positron emission tomography (PET), H215O, and18F-FDG. Each subject was studied twice, under placebo and physostigmine, in randomized order and blind fashion using the maximal tolerated dose of physostigmine individually determined. Under physostigmine CBF increased significantly (P = 0.0007) in posterior regions of the cerebral cortex and in the subcortical structures. Inversely, GC was decreased significantly in most regions. The largest decrease was seen in the prefrontal region of the cerebral cortex (P < 0.0001). Significant regional decreases were registered in all three groups of subjects, but were larger in AD than in controls. Looking at the absolute values of prefrontal cortex metabolism we found no correlation (r = 0.04) between the responses of CBF and GC. After normalization of the regional values for the mean we found a significant positive correlation between the responses of CBF and GC (r = 0.71,P < 0.0001). These findings suggest two components in the CBF response to physostigmine: one metabolic, depressive, and regional which follows the GC response; and one vascular, larger, diffuse, and opposite in direction to the metabolic component. These results have implications for the interpretation of CBF values as tracer of brain metabolic activity when brain cholinergic neurotransmission is manipulated.
NeuroImage.
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M George,
J. ROTHWELL,
R BARKER,
S ZEKI,
D FFYTCHE,
C Ballard,
T LANDIS,
N Legg,
N. Khalil,
D CHAN, [......],
S Bechet,
E Salmon,
X Seron,
M Rooney,
M Allin,
L Rifkin,
J Townsend,
A Stewart,
M Hotopf,
P HALLIGAN