scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging brain amyloid in Alzheimer's disease with Pittsburgh Compound-B.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The results suggest that PET imaging with the novel tracer, PIB, can provide quantitative information on amyloid deposits in living subjects.
Abstract
This report describes the first human study of a novel amyloid-imaging positron emission tomography (PET) tracer, termed Pittsburgh Compound-B (PIB), in 16 patients with diagnosed mild AD and 9 controls. Compared with controls, AD patients typically showed marked retention of PIB in areas of association cortex known to contain large amounts of amyloid deposits in AD. In the AD patient group, PIB retention was increased most prominently in frontal cortex (1.94-fold, p = 0.0001). Large increases also were observed in parietal (1.71-fold, p = 0.0002), temporal (1.52-fold, p = 0.002), and occipital (1.54-fold, p = 0.002) cortex and the striatum (1.76-fold, p = 0.0001). PIB retention was equivalent in AD patients and controls in areas known to be relatively unaffected by amyloid deposition (such as subcortical white matter, pons, and cerebellum). Studies in three young (21 years) and six older healthy controls (69.5 +/- 11 years) showed low PIB retention in cortical areas and no significant group differences between young and older controls. In cortical areas, PIB retention correlated inversely with cerebral glucose metabolism determined with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose. This relationship was most robust in the parietal cortex (r = -0.72; p = 0.0001). The results suggest that PET imaging with the novel tracer, PIB, can provide quantitative information on amyloid deposits in living subjects.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Altered Gray Matter Structural Covariance Networks in Early Stages of Alzheimer's Disease

TL;DR: The observed changes suggest that early disruptions in structural association between heteromodal association cortices and the entorhinal cortex could contribute to an isolation of the hippocampal formation, potentially giving rise to the clinical hallmark of AD, progressive memory impairment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative imaging of protein targets in the human brain with PET.

TL;DR: This review examines the activity of the field around each of the protein targets in the human brain with high affinity radiolabelled molecules and considers some of the confounds, challenges and subtleties that arise in practice when trying to quantify and interpret PET neuroimaging data.
Journal Article

Effects of liraglutide on neurodegeneration, blood flow and cognition in Alzheimer´s disease - protocol for a controlled, randomized double-blinded trial.

TL;DR: The goal is to find a new therapeutic agent that alters the pathophysiology in AD patients by decreasing the formation of Aβ plaques and thereby presumably improves the cognitive function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mild Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults

TL;DR: A new classification scheme has been developed that has categorized AD into a preclinical phase (research category), MCI due to AD, and dementia of Alzheimer’s type, and there are also ongoing research studies to understand high-risk groups for non-Alzheimer's dementia.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease : report of the NINCDS-ADRDA Work Group under the auspices of Department of Health and Human Services Task Force on Alzheimer's Disease

TL;DR: The criteria proposed are intended to serve as a guide for the diagnosis of probable, possible, and definite Alzheimer's disease; these criteria will be revised as more definitive information becomes available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropathological stageing of Alzheimer-related changes.

Heiko Braak, +1 more
TL;DR: The investigation showed that recognition of the six stages required qualitative evaluation of only a few key preparations, permitting the differentiation of six stages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Graphical Evaluation of Blood-to-Brain Transfer Constants from Multiple-Time Uptake Data:

TL;DR: A theoretical model of blood–brain exchange is developed and a procedure is derived that can be used for graphing multiple-time tissue uptake data and determining whether a unidirectional transfer process was dominant during part or all of the experimental period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phases of Aβ-deposition in the human brain and its relevance for the development of AD

TL;DR: Aβ-deposition in the entire brain follows a distinct sequence in which the regions are hierarchically involved and expands anterogradely into regions that receive neuronal projections from regions already exhibiting Aβ.
Journal ArticleDOI

Graphical Evaluation of Blood-to-Brain Transfer Constants from Multiple-Time Uptake Data. Generalizations:

TL;DR: General equations are derived that can be used to analyze tissue uptake data when the blood–plasma concentration of the test substance cannot be easily measured and for situations when trapping of theTest substance is incomplete and for a combination of these two conditions.
Related Papers (5)