Hall Andrew M, Moore Robert Y, Lopez Oscar L, Kuller Lewis, Becker James T
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Alzheimers Dement. 2008 Jul;4(4):271-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2008.04.005.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common degenerative neurologic disorder. The onset of symptoms is insidious and follows a long period of progression of an asymptomatic pathology that proceeds in a precise anatomic and temporal sequence. Recent studies with quantitative magnetic resonance imaging techniques have shown the localization of the in vivo pathology of AD and its antecedent, mild cognitive impairment. The objective of the present study was to determine whether a sensitive and reliable marker for the presymptomatic phase of the disorder could be identified by longitudinal analysis of an initially asymptomatic, community-based population.
One hundred forty-eight healthy, cognitively normal participants in the Cardiovascular Health Study-Cognition Study had detailed clinical examinations and magnetic resonance imaging scans in 1998-1999 and 2002-2003. Modulated voxel-based morphometry was used to compare regional brain volumes in subjects who remained cognitively normal after 5 to 6 years of follow-up (n = 127) with those who developed probable AD during the same period (n = 21).
Among normal subjects destined to develop AD, there was significant atrophy in the basal forebrain area as long as 4.5 years before the development of clinical symptoms. When the left hippocampus was also atrophic, the onset of dementia typically occurred earlier than in cases in which the atrophy was confined to basal forebrain.
Atrophy in the basal forebrain precedes the development of AD in subjects with cognition judged to be normal by neuropsychological testing. The time required to develop dementia appears to be shortened if hippocampal atrophy is also present. These data indicate that atrophy restricted to medial basal forebrain is a biomarker that predicts development of probable AD in asymptomatic elderly subjects.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是最常见的神经退行性疾病。症状隐匿起病,在一段长时间的无症状病理进展之后出现,且该病理进展遵循精确的解剖学和时间顺序。近期采用定量磁共振成像技术的研究已显示出AD及其前驱疾病轻度认知障碍的体内病理学定位。本研究的目的是通过对最初无症状的社区人群进行纵向分析,确定是否能识别出该疾病症状前期的敏感且可靠的标志物。
心血管健康研究认知研究中的148名健康、认知正常的参与者在1998 - 1999年及2002 - 2003年接受了详细的临床检查和磁共振成像扫描。采用基于体素的形态测量法,比较随访5至6年后仍认知正常的受试者(n = 127)与同期发生可能AD的受试者(n = 21)的脑区体积。
在注定会发展为AD的正常受试者中,早在临床症状出现前4.5年,基底前脑区域就出现了明显萎缩。当左侧海马体也萎缩时,痴呆的起病通常比萎缩仅局限于基底前脑的情况更早。
在经神经心理学测试判断认知正常的受试者中,基底前脑萎缩先于AD的发生。如果同时存在海马体萎缩,发展为痴呆所需的时间似乎会缩短。这些数据表明,仅局限于内侧基底前脑的萎缩是预测无症状老年受试者发生可能AD的生物标志物。