Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIt has been shown that disorders associated with early‐life alterations in amyloid production or processing such as in autosomal dominant Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and down syndrome‐associated dementia have a different pattern of Aβ deposition, with early striatal accumulation, as compared to sporadic late‐onset cases, in which striatal deposition has been suggested to be a marker of late and advanced amyloidosis. It is not clear, however, if the pattern of amyloid accumulation is related to any other factors or if it has any impact on brain metabolism. We aimed to determine if there are any clinical or demographic predictors of striatal tau accumulation in sporadic AD and whether its presence affects the subjects´ brain metabolism.MethodSubjects that underwent positron emission tomography (PET) scans with 18F‐FDG and 11C‐PIB were analyzed retrospectively. Only those with clinical diagnosis of AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to AD were considered for the analysis. Visual analyses were performed to exclude subjects without cortical amyloid accumulation. Mean values from cortical volumes of interest (VOIs) and striatum were obtained. Amyloid deposition was correlated with age and disease duration via Pearson’s correlations. Amyloid deposition was also correlated to brain metabolism as assessed by FDG PET.Result150 subjects were included in this study. Neither age nor disease duration was correlated with striatal amyloid accumulation. Subjects with striatal Pib accumulation showed higher cortical amyloid burden. Moreover, higher striatal amyloid burden was positively correlated with higher frontal amyloid burden specifically. Amyloid burden in the striatum did not seem to have an impact on the glucose metabolism in the striatum itself. However, variations in cortical glucose metabolism could be observed. A higher striatal amyloid burden was correlated with cortical glucose hypometabolism, specifically in the precuneus and temporal areas (Figure 1).ConclusionThere seems to be a stage of sporadic Alzheimer’s disease in which amyloid accumulates in the striatum. This, in turn, appears to have an impact on brain functioning. Whether this has a real impact on cognitive performance remains to be elucidated.

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