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Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 54-62 (January 2010)


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White matter integrity and cortical metabolic associations in aging and dementia

Beth KuczynskiaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Elizabeth Targana, Cindee Madisona, Michael Weinerb, Yu Zhangb, Bruce Reedc, Helena C. Chuid, William Jagusta

Abstract 

Background

Studies show that white matter hyperintensities, regardless of location, primarily affect frontal lobe metabolism and function. This report investigated how regional white matter integrity (measured as fractional anisotropy [FA]) relates to brain metabolism, to unravel the complex relationship between white matter changes and brain metabolism.

Objective

To elucidate the relationship between white matter integrity and gray matter metabolism using diffusion tensor imaging and fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography in a cohort of 16 subjects ranging from normal to demented (age, >55 years).

Methods

Mean FA values from white matter regions underlying the medial prefrontal, inferior-lateral prefrontal, parietal association, and posterior temporal areas and the corpus callosum were regressed with glucose metabolism (by positron emission tomography), using statistical parametric mapping (P < 0.005; voxel cluster, >100). Regional cerebral glucose metabolism was the primary outcome measure. According to our hypothesis, those hypometabolic cortical regions affected by Alzheimer's disease would correlate with a lower FA of associated tracks.

Results

Our data show inter-regional positive correlations between FA and gray matter metabolism for the prefrontal cortex, temporal, and parietal regions. Our results suggest that left prefrontal FA is associated with left temporal and parietal metabolism. Further, left posterior temporal FA correlated with left prefrontal metabolism. Finally, bilateral parietal FA correlated with bilateral temporal metabolism.

Conclusions

These regions are associated with cognitive processes affected in Alzheimer's disease and cerebrovascular disease, suggesting a link with white matter degeneration and gray matter hypometabolism. Therefore, cortical function and white matter degeneration are related in aging and dementia.

a Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California at Berkeley, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA

c Alzheimer's Center and Northern California Veterans Affairs Health Care System, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA, USA

b Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

d Department of Neurology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: 925-708-0560; Fax: 510-642-3192.

PII: S1552-5260(09)00103-4

doi:10.1016/j.jalz.2009.04.1228


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