Aylward E H, Habbak R, Warren A C, Pulsifer M B, Barta P E, Jerram M, Pearlson G D
Division of Psychiatric Neuroimaging, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md, USA.
Arch Neurol. 1997 Feb;54(2):209-12. doi: 10.1001/archneur.1997.00550140077016.
To determine the effects of aging on cerebellar volume in individuals with Down syndrome (DS). To determine whether volume of cerebellum is associated with dementia or with age-related decline in fine-motor control.
Case-control study involving comparison of cerebellar volumes in adults with DS and matched control subjects; survey study involving correlations between cerebellar volume and subjects' age and performance on a test of fine motor control; and longitudinal study assessing change in cerebellar volume in adults with DS.
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md.
Subjects included 40 adults with DS. Thirty of them were matched on age, sex, and race with cognitively normal subjects. A diagnosis of probable dementia was made for 5 of the subjects with DS. Longitudinal data were available for 23 of the 40 subjects with DS, with a mean interscan interval of 2 years.
Volumes of cerebellum, total brain, and intracranial region were measured on magnetic resonance imaging scans. The Purdue Pegboard, a test of fine-motor control, was administered to 38 of the subjects with DS.
Subjects with DS had significantly smaller cerebellar volumes than matched controls, even after adjusting for total brain volume or total intracranial volume. Volume of cerebellum did not correlate significantly with age for either the subjects with DS or controls. Longitudinal change in cerebellar volume in subjects with DS was not significant. Volume of total brain, but not cerebellum, correlated significantly with performance on the Purdue Pegboard.
Although cerebellar volumes are disproportionately small in individuals with DS, they do not diminish significantly with age and do not undergo age-related atrophy that is different from that of normal controls. Volume reduction in the cerebellum does not appear to be specifically responsible for the age-related decline in fine-motor control that is observed in adults with DS.
确定衰老对唐氏综合征(DS)患者小脑体积的影响。确定小脑体积是否与痴呆症或与年龄相关的精细运动控制能力下降有关。
病例对照研究,比较唐氏综合征成年患者和匹配的对照受试者的小脑体积;调查研究,涉及小脑体积与受试者年龄以及精细运动控制测试表现之间的相关性;纵向研究,评估唐氏综合征成年患者小脑体积的变化。
马里兰州巴尔的摩市约翰霍普金斯大学医学院。
受试者包括40名唐氏综合征成年患者。其中30人与认知正常的受试者在年龄、性别和种族上相匹配。40名唐氏综合征受试者中有5人被诊断为可能患有痴呆症。40名唐氏综合征受试者中有23人有纵向数据,平均扫描间隔为2年。
通过磁共振成像扫描测量小脑、全脑和颅内区域的体积。对38名唐氏综合征受试者进行了普渡钉板测试,这是一项精细运动控制测试。
即使在调整了全脑体积或总颅内体积后,唐氏综合征受试者的小脑体积仍显著小于匹配的对照组。唐氏综合征受试者和对照组的小脑体积与年龄均无显著相关性。唐氏综合征受试者小脑体积的纵向变化不显著。全脑体积而非小脑体积与普渡钉板测试的表现显著相关。
尽管唐氏综合征患者的小脑体积相对较小,但它们不会随年龄显著减小,也不会出现与正常对照组不同的与年龄相关的萎缩。小脑体积减小似乎并非导致唐氏综合征成年患者观察到的与年龄相关的精细运动控制能力下降的具体原因。