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Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy

Heterogeneity within the Alzheimer's disease (AD) syndromic spectrum is typically classified in a domain-specific manner (e.g., language vs. visual cognitive function). The central aim of this study was to investigate whether impairment in visual cognitive tasks thought to be subserved by poste...

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Autores principales: Putcha, Deepti, Brickhouse, Michael, Touroutoglou, Alexandra, Collins, Jessica A., Quimby, Megan, Wong, Bonnie, Eldaief, Mark, Schultz, Aaron, El Fakhri, Georges, Johnson, Keith, Dickerson, Bradford C., McGinnis, Scott M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6562373/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31200149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101889
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author Putcha, Deepti
Brickhouse, Michael
Touroutoglou, Alexandra
Collins, Jessica A.
Quimby, Megan
Wong, Bonnie
Eldaief, Mark
Schultz, Aaron
El Fakhri, Georges
Johnson, Keith
Dickerson, Bradford C.
McGinnis, Scott M.
author_facet Putcha, Deepti
Brickhouse, Michael
Touroutoglou, Alexandra
Collins, Jessica A.
Quimby, Megan
Wong, Bonnie
Eldaief, Mark
Schultz, Aaron
El Fakhri, Georges
Johnson, Keith
Dickerson, Bradford C.
McGinnis, Scott M.
author_sort Putcha, Deepti
collection PubMed
description Heterogeneity within the Alzheimer's disease (AD) syndromic spectrum is typically classified in a domain-specific manner (e.g., language vs. visual cognitive function). The central aim of this study was to investigate whether impairment in visual cognitive tasks thought to be subserved by posterior cortical dysfunction in non-amnestic AD presentations is associated with tau, amyloid, or neurodegeneration in those regions using (18)F-AV-1451 and (11)C-PiB positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Sixteen amyloid-positive patients who met criteria for either Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA; n = 10) or logopenic variant Primary Progressive Aphasia (lvPPA; n = 6) were studied. All participants underwent a structured clinical assessment, neuropsychological battery, structural MRI, amyloid PET, and tau PET. The neuropsychological battery included two visual cognitive tests: VOSP Number Location and Benton Facial Recognition. Surface-based whole-cortical general linear models were used to first explore the similarities and differences between these biomarkers in the two patient groups, and then to assess their regional associations with visual cognitive test performance. The results show that these two variants of AD have both dissociable and overlapping areas of tau and atrophy, but amyloid is distributed with a stereotyped localization in both variants. Performance on both visual cognitive tests were associated with tau and atrophy in the right lateral and medial occipital association cortex, superior parietal cortex, and posterior ventral occipitotemporal cortex. No cortical associations were observed with amyloid PET. We further demonstrate that cortical atrophy has a partially mediating effect on the association between tau pathology and visual cognitive task performance. Our findings show that non-amnestic variants of AD have partially dissociable spatial patterns of tau and atrophy that localize as expected based on symptoms, but similar patterns of amyloid. Further, we demonstrate that impairments of visual cognitive dysfunction are strongly associated with tau in visual cortical regions and mediated in part by atrophy.
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spelling pubmed-65623732019-06-17 Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy Putcha, Deepti Brickhouse, Michael Touroutoglou, Alexandra Collins, Jessica A. Quimby, Megan Wong, Bonnie Eldaief, Mark Schultz, Aaron El Fakhri, Georges Johnson, Keith Dickerson, Bradford C. McGinnis, Scott M. Neuroimage Clin Regular Article Heterogeneity within the Alzheimer's disease (AD) syndromic spectrum is typically classified in a domain-specific manner (e.g., language vs. visual cognitive function). The central aim of this study was to investigate whether impairment in visual cognitive tasks thought to be subserved by posterior cortical dysfunction in non-amnestic AD presentations is associated with tau, amyloid, or neurodegeneration in those regions using (18)F-AV-1451 and (11)C-PiB positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Sixteen amyloid-positive patients who met criteria for either Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA; n = 10) or logopenic variant Primary Progressive Aphasia (lvPPA; n = 6) were studied. All participants underwent a structured clinical assessment, neuropsychological battery, structural MRI, amyloid PET, and tau PET. The neuropsychological battery included two visual cognitive tests: VOSP Number Location and Benton Facial Recognition. Surface-based whole-cortical general linear models were used to first explore the similarities and differences between these biomarkers in the two patient groups, and then to assess their regional associations with visual cognitive test performance. The results show that these two variants of AD have both dissociable and overlapping areas of tau and atrophy, but amyloid is distributed with a stereotyped localization in both variants. Performance on both visual cognitive tests were associated with tau and atrophy in the right lateral and medial occipital association cortex, superior parietal cortex, and posterior ventral occipitotemporal cortex. No cortical associations were observed with amyloid PET. We further demonstrate that cortical atrophy has a partially mediating effect on the association between tau pathology and visual cognitive task performance. Our findings show that non-amnestic variants of AD have partially dissociable spatial patterns of tau and atrophy that localize as expected based on symptoms, but similar patterns of amyloid. Further, we demonstrate that impairments of visual cognitive dysfunction are strongly associated with tau in visual cortical regions and mediated in part by atrophy. Elsevier 2019-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6562373/ /pubmed/31200149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101889 Text en © 2019 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Putcha, Deepti
Brickhouse, Michael
Touroutoglou, Alexandra
Collins, Jessica A.
Quimby, Megan
Wong, Bonnie
Eldaief, Mark
Schultz, Aaron
El Fakhri, Georges
Johnson, Keith
Dickerson, Bradford C.
McGinnis, Scott M.
Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title_full Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title_fullStr Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title_full_unstemmed Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title_short Visual cognition in non-amnestic Alzheimer's disease: Relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
title_sort visual cognition in non-amnestic alzheimer's disease: relations to tau, amyloid, and cortical atrophy
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6562373/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31200149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101889
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