Title of article :
Patterns of cortical activity and memory performance in Alzheimer’s disease
Author/Authors :
Johannes Schr?der، نويسنده , , Monte S. Buchsbaum، نويسنده , , Lina Shihabuddin، نويسنده , , Cheuk Tang، نويسنده , , Tsechung Wei، نويسنده , , Jacqueline Spiegel-Cohen، نويسنده , , Erin A. Hazlett، نويسنده , , Lennart Abel، نويسنده , , Christina Luu-Hsia، نويسنده , , Tina M. Ciaravolo، نويسنده , , Deborah Marin، نويسنده , , Kenneth L. Davis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Background: %Declarative memory changes are the hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease, although their functional neuroanatomy is not restricted to a single structure. Factor analysis provides statistical methods for evaluating patterns of cerebral changes in regional glucose uptake.
Methods:Thirty-three Alzheimer’s patients and 33 age- and gender-matched control subjects were studied with magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography with [18F] deoxyglucose. During the tracer-uptake period, subjects performed a serial verbal learning task. Cortical activity was measured in 32 regions of interest, four in each lobe on both hemispheres.
Results:Factor analysis with varimax rotation identified seven factors explaining 80% of the variance (“parietal cortex,” “occipital cortex,” “right temporo-prefrontal areas,” “frontal cortex,” “motor strip,” “left temporal cortex,” and “posterior temporal cortex”). Relative to control subjects, Alzheimer’s patients showed significantly reduced values on the factors occipital cortex, right temporo-prefrontal areas, frontal cortex, and left temporal cortex. The factor temporo-prefrontal areas showed large differences between patients with good and poor performance, but little difference when control subjects were similarly divided.
Conclusions:Findings suggest that Alzheimer’s disease is characterized by altered patterns of cortical activity, rather than deficits in a single location, and emphasize the importance of right temporo-prefrontal circuitry for understanding memory deficits.
Keywords :
Alzheimer’s disease , positronemission tomography , magnetic resonance imaging , verbalmemory , factor analysis , Dementia
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry