Contact: Karin Eskenazi
Phone: (212) 305-5587
INVESTIGATORS AT COLUMBIA PRESBYTERIAN CENTER HAVE DEFINED TWO DISTINCT
PATTERNS OF MEMORY LOSS IN THE ELDERLY
Noninvasive Test Now Available for Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease
NEW YORK, NY, July 1, 1999 — Through a novel use of functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI), researchers at the Columbia Presbyterian Center
of New York Presbyterian Hospital have provided evidence of two distinct
memory decline patterns in the elderly. In the future clinicians
hope to use this technique to diagnose patients in the very early stages
of Alzheimer's disease and implement early intervention strategies to slow
the condition's progression.
The results of the Columbia Presbyterian Center study were presented
in Toronto at the 51st Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Neurology
by Scott A. Small, MD, Associate Professor of Neurology at the Gertrude
H. Sergievsky Center of the Columbia University College of Physicians &
Surgeons, Clinical Assistant Neurologist at New York Presbyterian Hospital,
and author of the study.
Memory decline with age is common, with some reports suggesting that
more than 40 percent of people over age 60 have some memory impairment.
But not all age-related memory decline inevitably leads to the development
of Alzheimer's disease. "Both Alzheimer's disease and other age-dependent
physiologic changes probably contribute to memory decline in the elderly.
A key question for researchers is, 'how do we distinguish between these
processes?' A test that could do so would be extremely helpful in
identifying individuals in the early stages, when the main focus of treatment
is halting progression--the earlier, the better," says Dr. Small.
The Columbia Presbyterian Center researchers used fMRI, a noninvasive
modification of traditional MRI, to analyze changes in the hippocampus
region of the brain during memory tests. It's been known for decades that
the hippocampus is integral to the brain's memory function. Other
functional imaging techniques, such as positron emission tomography (PET),
have been used to study brain changes related to memory function, but these
techniques have been unable to selectively assess different regions within
the hippocampus and thus cannot show how specific areas of the brain alter
as memory declines. The study led by Dr. Small is the first to document
functional changes in various areas in the hippocampal formation.
"The hippocampus is the first brain structure to be targeted by
Alzheimer's disease; therefore, detection of changes in this area
would provide early diagnosis of the condition. Through the use of
fMRI, we were able to show two distinct patterns of age-related memory
decline in the healthy, nondemented elderly. We believe that those
individuals with dysfunction in the entorhinal region of the hippocampus
have early Alzheimer's disease, while those with dysfunction in other regions
of the hippocampus do not," notes Dr. Small.
The study first evaluated memory function in three groups of individuals
over age 65: four patients with normal memory, 13 with isolated memory
decline, and four with mild Alzheimer's disease. All of the study
participants viewed photographic portraits for four minutes while undergoing
a brain MRI. Study participants were selected from the Washington
Heights Inwood Aging Project, a long-term, community-based random aging
project of elderly residents of northern Manhattan. They were followed
for at least three years.
The researchers then conducted fMRI and memory testing on the 13 individuals
with isolated memory decline. Results showed that five had decreased
activation of the entorhinal cortex region of the hippocampus (-EC group),
while the remaining eight had normal activation (+EC group). Moreover,
the -EC group also had diminished activation in both the subiculum region
and hippocampus proper, while the +EC group had diminished activation in
only the subiculum region.
"This regional activation pattern in the -EC group was indistinguishable
from the pattern we documented earlier in the patients with Alzheimer's
disease, making it quite likely that these patients are in the initial
disease stage. But because the entorhinal cortex is the first brain
region that's targeted by Alzheimer's disease, the +EC group, which had
no evidence of change in this area, is unlikely to have early disease,"
explains Dr. Small.
The -EC group also had greater decline in abstract reasoning and language
function over time when compared to the +EC group. Studies have shown
that memory decline in conjunction with a decline in abstract reasoning
skills predicts progression to Alzheimer's disease.
While the underlying causes of non-Alzheimer's disease-related memory
decline remain unknown, there are several possibilities. Age-dependent
changes in adrenal and gonadal hormones, as well as changes in cerebrovascular
blood supply, may somehow impair cells in the hippocampus and result in
memory impairment.
"We believe that the results of our study show that fMRI may in the
future be developed both as a screening tool for detecting Alzheimer's
disease in its initial stages, which would permit early intervention, and
as reassurance for patients with the non-Alzheimer's disease-related pattern
that their memory decline is not associated with that disease," concludes
Dr. Small.
© 1999 New York Presbyterian
Hospital
Weill Medical College of Cornell
University
|