Abstract

The cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular reactivity to acetazolamide were investigated in Alzheimer's disease using stable xenon computed tomography (CT). Ten patients with Alzheimer's disease and 10 healthy controls were studied. The regional cerebral blood flow was measured using the xenon delivery and analysis system (AZ-7000 model, Anzai Sogyo, Tokyo, Japan) and CT (PreSage, Yokogawa Medical Systems, Tokyo, Japan). The subjects inhaled room air followed by a mixture of 30% xenon and 50% oxygen for 3 min. Serial scanning was performed once before xenon inhalation, three times in the wash-in process and five times in the washout process of 5 min. The xenon concentration in the end-tidal expired gas was recorded continuously by the thermoconductivity method. The regional cerebral blood flow was measured before and 20 min after i.v. injection of 17 mg/kg acetazolamide. The blood flows in the frontal lobe, parietal lobe and temporal lobe were reduced but the blood flows in the caudate nucleus, putamen and thalamus were normal in the Alzheimer's disease group. The cerebrovascular reactivity to acetazolamide was reduced in the frontal, parietal and temporal cortex but was normal in the other areas. There is a regional difference in the cerebral blood flow and the cerebrovascular reactivity to acetazolamide in Alzheimer's disease

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