DocumentCode :
1530288
Title :
Cortical atrophy in Alzheimer´s disease unmasks electrically silent sulci and lowers EEG dipolarity
Author :
Hara, Junko ; Shankle, William Rodman ; Musha, Toshimitsu
Author_Institution :
Bioinf. Lab., Keio Univ., Kanagawa, Japan
Volume :
46
Issue :
8
fYear :
1999
Firstpage :
905
Lastpage :
910
Abstract :
Alzheimer´s disease (AD) patients show lower dipolarity (goodness-of-fit) for dipole localizations of alpha or other dominant electroencephalography (EEG) frequency components in the occipital cortex. In the present study, we performed computer simulations to discover which of distributions of dipole activity lower dipolarity in a manner similar to that seen in severe AD. Dipolarity was estimated from simulations of various electric dipole generator configurations within the occipital cortex under conditions of widened cortical sulci (a severely demented AD case) or no sulcal widening (a normal subject). The cortical and scalp surfaces, derived from the subjects´ MRI´s, were assumed to be uniformly electrically conducting. Randomly placed, nonoverlapping lesions ranging from 1 to 4 mm 2 per lesion were used in both the normal and AD models to simulate the electrical effect of neuropathological AD lesions. In both models, dipolarity decreased as total lesion size increased. However, the AD model showed lower dipolarity than the normal model for both individual lesion sizes and for larger total lesion sizes. The larger decline in dipolarity in the AD model appears to be due to sulcal widening which unmasks the effect of lesions buried within sulci. These simulations identify a possible mechanism explaining why sulcally-located neuropathological changes plus progressive cortical atrophy in AD brains (and presumably other cortical disorders producing atrophy) alter EEG patterns and dipolarity differently from normal cortex damaged by similar lesions.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; diseases; electroencephalography; neurophysiology; Alzheimer´s disease; EEG frequency components; alpha frequency components; computer simulations; cortical atrophy; dipole localizations; distributions of dipole activity; electric dipole generator configurations; electrically silent sulci; lower EEG dipolarity; neuron loss; neuropathological lesions; occipital cortex; randomly placed nonoverlapping lesions; realistic head model; synapse loss; widened cortical sulci; Alzheimer´s disease; Atrophy; Brain modeling; Computational modeling; Computer simulation; Electroencephalography; Frequency; Lesions; Magnetic resonance imaging; Scalp; Adult; Aged; Alzheimer Disease; Atrophy; Computer Simulation; Electric Conductivity; Electroencephalography; Evoked Potentials; Female; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Models, Neurological; Occipital Lobe; Probability; Reference Values;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/10.775399
Filename :
775399
Link To Document :
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