Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) progressively degrades the brain's gray and white matter. Changes in white matter reflect changes in the brain's structural connectivity pattern. Here, we established individual structural connectivity networks (ISCNs) to distinguish predementia and dementia AD from healthy aging in individual scans. Diffusion tractography was used to construct ISCNs with a fully automated procedure for 21 healthy control subjects (HC), 23 patients with mild cognitive impairment and conversion to AD dementia within 3 years (AD-MCI), and 17 patients with mild AD dementia. Three typical pattern classifiers were used for AD prediction. Patients with AD and AD-MCI were separated from HC with accuracies greater than 95% and 90%, respectively, irrespective of prediction approach and specific fiber properties. Most informative connections involved medial prefrontal, posterior parietal, and insular cortex. Patients with mild AD were separated from those with AD-MCI with an accuracy of approximately 85%. Our finding provides evidence that ISCNs are sensitive to the impact of earliest stages of AD. ISCNs may be useful as a white matter-based imaging biomarker to distinguish healthy aging from AD.
Highlights
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common cause of age-related dementia, is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by increasing cognitive and behavioral deficits (Blennow et al, 2006)
(i) AD-mild cognitive impairment (MCI) vs. HC: AD-MCI subjects were distinguished from healthy control subjects with an accuracy of 97.73% when using fiber density (Table 2)
Diffusion tractography-based individual structural connectivity networks (ISCNs) and pattern recognition were used to study white matter changes in very early stages of AD
Summary
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common cause of age-related dementia, is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by increasing cognitive and behavioral deficits (Blennow et al, 2006). J. Shao et al / Neurobiology of Aging 33 (2012) 2756 –2765 Group HC (n ϭ 21) Mild AD (n ϭ 17) AD-MCI (n ϭ 23) p. Female Male Age MMSE score Delayed recall (CERAD).
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