Rates of global and regional cerebral atrophy in AD and frontotemporal dementia

D Chan, NC Fox, R Jenkins, RI Scahill, WR Crum… - Neurology, 2001 - AAN Enterprises
D Chan, NC Fox, R Jenkins, RI Scahill, WR Crum, MN Rossor
Neurology, 2001AAN Enterprises
Objective: Serial registered MRI provides a reproducible technique for detecting progressive
cerebral atrophy in vivo and was used to determine if there were differences between the
rates of cerebral atrophy in AD and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Methods: Eighty-four
patients with dementia (54 AD and 30 FTD) and 27 age-matched control subjects each had
at least two volumetric MR scans. Serial scans were positionally matched (registered), and
brain volume loss was determined by calculation of the brain boundary shift integral …
Objective: Serial registered MRI provides a reproducible technique for detecting progressive cerebral atrophy in vivo and was used to determine if there were differences between the rates of cerebral atrophy in AD and frontotemporal dementia (FTD).
Methods: Eighty-four patients with dementia (54 AD and 30 FTD) and 27 age-matched control subjects each had at least two volumetric MR scans. Serial scans were positionally matched (registered), and brain volume loss was determined by calculation of the brain boundary shift integral.
Results: There was a difference between the rates of whole-brain atrophy in patients (mean annual volume loss 2.7% of total brain volume) and in control subjects (mean annual volume loss 0.5%). AD and FTD were associated with different rates of atrophy (mean annual losses 2.4 and 3.2%). The range of atrophy rates in the FTD group (0.3 to 8.0%) greatly exceeded that in the AD group (0.5 to 4.7%). Frontal-variant FTD was associated with a wider range of atrophy rates than temporal-variant FTD. Analysis of regional brain atrophy rates revealed that there was widespread symmetrically distributed cerebral volume loss in AD, whereas in frontal FTD there was greater atrophy anteriorly and in temporal FTD the atrophy rate was greatest in the left anterior cerebral cortex.
Conclusions: Both AD and FTD patients had increased rates of brain atrophy. Whereas the patients with AD were associated with a relatively restricted spread of atrophy rates, the greater spread of rates observed in the patients with FTD may reflect the heterogeneity of disease in FTD, with differences observed between frontal and temporal FTD. Increased rates of whole-brain atrophy did not discriminate AD from FTD, but analysis of regional atrophy rates revealed marked differences between patient groups.
American Academy of Neurology