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Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis Megha Vasavada

Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

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Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis. Megha Vasavada. Alzheimer’s disease. Most common form of dementia affecting 5.2 million Americans Symptoms: problems with memory, thinking, and behavior As the disease progresses the symptoms intensify - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease

diagnosisMegha Vasavada

Page 2: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Alzheimer’s disease

Most common form of dementia affecting 5.2 million Americans

Symptoms: problems with memory, thinking, and behavior

As the disease progresses the symptoms intensify› Disorientation› mood and behavior changes› deepening confusion about events, time and place › unfounded suspicions about family, friends and

professional caregivers› more serious memory loss and behavior changes› difficulty speaking, swallowing and walking.

Page 3: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Central Nervous System

Controls both voluntary activities and autonomic functions› Integrates sensory information, emotions,

thoughts, memory, and personality

Page 4: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Frontal Lobe

Temporal Lobe

BrainstemCerebellum

Occipital Lobe

Parietal Lobe

• 'higher' cognitive functions• attention• thought• voluntary movement• decision–making• language.

• recognition• perception (hearing, vision, smell)• understanding language• learning and memory

• perception/ integration of somatosensory information (e.g. touch, pressure, temperature, and pain)• visuospatial processing• spatial attention• spatial mapping• number representation

• maintaining homeostasis by controlling autonomic functions (blood pressure, breathing, digestion, heart rate, perspiration and temperature)•alertness•sleep•balance•startle response

• Vision

• coordination of voluntary movement• motor–learning• balance and posture• reflex memory•timing• sequence learning• integration of sensory information

http://www.g2conline.org/2022

Limbic Lobe

Page 5: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Limbic Lobe

• memory formation and storage• regulating emotion• processing smells

Page 6: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Frontal Lobe

Temporal Lobe

Occipital Lobe

Parietal Lobe

Brainstem

Cerebellum

Limbic Lobe

Page 7: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis
Page 8: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Page 9: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

MRI:

• Visualize structural changes

• Track neuronal activation by studying blood flow (functional MRI)

Page 10: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Olfaction and Alzheimer’s

AD patients in the early stage have deficits in detection, recognition, and memory of an odor

AD patients have significantly reduced smell sensitivity

Areas involved in olfactory processing are the first areas affected by the classic pathology (Amyloid Beta plaques (Aβ) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT))

Page 11: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Alzheimer’s Pathology Amyloid Beta

plaques › accumulation of Aβ in

extracellular space. Neurofibrillary

tangles › hyperphosphorylated

tau accumulation within neurons in the brain

Diagnosis occurs here

Page 12: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Alzheimer’s Pathology

Page 13: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Overview

Basic neuroanatomy› Medial temporal lobe = start of AD

patholgy› Olfactory areas are in the medial temporal

lobe Neuroimaging

› MRI provides a tool to look at the anatomy and activation in humans

Therefore, we will use MRI to study early changes in AD patients.

Page 14: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Hypothesis

Olfactory dysfunction will be present in our two patient groups

The volume of the primary olfactory cortex (POC) and hippocampus will be smaller in the two groups

The fMRI will show decreased activation in the POC and the hippocampus

Overall- fMRI is more sensitive to earlier changes in MCI and AD patients

Page 15: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Subjects

AD, mild cognitively impaired (MCI), and normal controls were enrolled› MCI- considered the transitional stage from

normal to AD (important group to study early diagnosis markers)

27 NC 21 MCI 15 AD

Page 16: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Methods

Smell test› University of Pennsylvania Smell

Identification Test MRI:

› Anatomical scan› fMRI scan with an olfactory task

Page 17: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Smell Test- Results

Page 18: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

POC and Hippocampus are smaller in MCI and AD

Hip

pocam

pu

s

PO

C

Page 19: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Activation is drastically decreased in MCI and AD

Hippocampus

POC

CN MCI AD

Page 20: Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging: Application to Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis

Conclusion UPSIT scores:

› Smell function is affected in MCI and AD Volume

› hippocampus and POC in MCI and AD Activation

› in MCI and AD patients

Activation changes are more drastic than behavioral or volumetric

changes in the MCI group