Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Hyderabad Campus, Hyderabad, 500078, India.
Neuromuscular Center, Department of Neurology, Neurological Institute, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA; Department of Neurosciences, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA.
Eur J Radiol. 2023 Jan;158:110616. doi: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2022.110616. Epub 2022 Nov 21.
Up to 50% of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients develop some degree of cognitive dysfunction and a small proportion of these develop frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Non-invasive techniques of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and [F]-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) have demonstrated structural and metabolic abnormalities, respectively, in the brains of such patients with ALS-FTD. Although initial F-FDG PET studies in ALS patients showed only hypometabolism of motor and extramotor brain regions, subsequent studies have demonstrated hypermetabolic changes as well. Such contrasting findings prompted us to hypothesize that hypo- and hypermetabolic brain regions in ALS-FTD patients are associated with divergent degeneration of structural grey matter (GM) and white matter (WM).
Cerebral glucose metabolic rate (CMR), cortical thickness (CT), fractal dimension (FD), and graph theory WM network analyses were performed on clinical MRI and F-FDG PET images from 8 ALS-FTD patients and 14 neurologic controls to explore the relationship between GM-WM degeneration and hypo- and hypermetabolic brain regions.
CMR revealed significant hypometabolism in frontal and precentral gyrus brain regions, with hypermetabolism in temporal, occipital and cerebellar regions. Cortical thinning was noted in both hypo- and hypermetabolic brain areas. Unlike CT, FD did not reveal widespread GM degeneration in hypo- and hypermetabolic brain regions of ALS-FTD patients. Graph theory analysis showed severe WM degeneration in hypometabolic but not hypermetabolic areas, especially in the right hemisphere.
Our multimodal MRI-PET study provides insights into potentially differential pathophysiological mechanisms between hypo- and hypermetabolic brain regions of ALS-FTD patients.
多达 50%的肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)患者会出现一定程度的认知功能障碍,其中一小部分会发展为额颞叶痴呆(FTD)。磁共振成像(MRI)和[F]-氟-2-脱氧-D-葡萄糖(F-FDG)正电子发射断层扫描(PET)等非侵入性技术分别显示出此类 ALS-FTD 患者大脑的结构和代谢异常。尽管最初的 ALS 患者 F-FDG PET 研究仅显示运动和运动外脑区的代谢低下,但随后的研究也显示出代谢亢进的变化。这些相互矛盾的发现促使我们假设 ALS-FTD 患者的低代谢和高代谢脑区与结构灰质(GM)和白质(WM)的不同退化有关。
对 8 名 ALS-FTD 患者和 14 名神经科对照组的临床 MRI 和 F-FDG PET 图像进行脑葡萄糖代谢率(CMR)、皮质厚度(CT)、分形维数(FD)和图论 WM 网络分析,以探讨 GM-WM 退化与低代谢和高代谢脑区之间的关系。
CMR 显示额叶和中央前回脑区的代谢明显低下,颞叶、枕叶和小脑区域的代谢亢进。低代谢和高代谢脑区均出现皮质变薄。与 CT 不同,FD 并未显示 ALS-FTD 患者低代谢和高代谢脑区的广泛 GM 退化。图论分析显示,低代谢区域而非高代谢区域的 WM 严重退化,尤其是在右半球。
我们的多模态 MRI-PET 研究深入了解了 ALS-FTD 患者低代谢和高代谢脑区之间潜在的不同病理生理机制。