30 resultados para HYPOMETABOLISM
Resumo:
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder. It is characterized by a severe loss of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons leading to dopamine depletion in the striatum. PD affects movement, producing motor symptoms such as rigidity, tremor and bradykinesia. Non-motor symptoms include autonomic dysfunction, neurobehavioral problems and cognitive impairment, which may lead to dementia. The pathophysiological basis of cognitive impairment and dementia in PD is unclear. The aim of this thesis was to study the pathophysiological basis of cognitive impairment and dementia in PD. We evaluated the relation between frontostriatal dopaminergic dysfunction and the cognitive symptoms in PD patients with [18F]Fdopa PET. We also combined [C]PIB and [18F]FDG PET and magnetic resonance imaging in PD patients with and without dementia. In addition, we analysed subregional striatal [18F]Fdopa PET data to find out whether a simple ratio approach would reliably separate PD patients from healthy controls. The impaired dopaminergic function of the frontostriatal regions was related to the impairment in cognitive functions, such as memory and cognitive processing in PD patients. PD patients with dementia showed an impaired glucose metabolism but not amyloid deposition in the cortical brain regions, and the hypometabolism was associated with the degree of cognitive impairment. PD patients had atrophy, both in the prefrontal cortex and in the hippocampus, and the hippocampal atrophy was related to impaired memory. A single 15-min scan 75 min after a tracer injection seemed to be sufficient for separating patients with PD from healthy controls in a clinical research environment. In conclusion, the occurrence of cognitive impairment and dementia in PD seems to be multifactorial and relates to changes, such as reduced dopaminergic activity, hypometabolism, brain atrophy and rarely to amyloid accumulation.
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The role of genetic factors in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is not completely understood. In order to improve this understanding, the cerebral glucose metabolism of seven monozygotic and nine dizygotic twin pairs discordant for AD was compared to that of 13 unrelated controls using positron emission tomography (PET). Traditional region of interest analysis revealed no differences between the non-demented dizygotic co-twins and controls. In contrast, in voxel-level and automated region of interest analyses, the non-demented monozygotic co-twins displayed a lower metabolic rate in temporal and parietal cortices as well as in subcortical grey matter structures when compared to controls. Again, no reductions were seen in the non-demented dizygotic co-twins. The reductions seen in the non-demented monozygotic co-twins may indicate a higher genetically mediated risk of AD or genetically mediated hypometabolism possibly rendering them more vulnerable to AD pathogenesis. With no disease modifying treatment available for AD, prevention of dementia is of the utmost importance. A total of 2 165 at least 65 years old twins of the Finnish Twin Cohort with questionnaire data from 1981 participated in a validated telephone interview assessing cognitive function between 1999 and 2007. Those subjects reporting heavy alcohol drinking in 1981 had an elevated cognitive impairment risk over 20 years later compared to light drinkers. In addition, binge drinking was associated with an increased risk even when total alcohol consumption was controlled for, suggesting that binge drinking is an independent risk factor for cognitive impairment. When compared to light drinkers, also non-drinkers had an increased risk of cognitive impairment. Midlife hypertension, obesity and low leisure time physical activity but not hypercholesterolemia were significant risk factors for cognitive impairment. The accumulation of risk factors increased cognitive impairment risk in an additive manner. A previously postulated dementia risk score based on midlife demographic and cardiovascular factors was validated. The risk score was found to well predict cognitive impairment risk, and cognitive impairment risk increased significantly as the score became higher. However, the risk score is not accurate enough for use in the clinic without further testing.
Resumo:
The study of semantic memory in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) has raised important questions about the representation of conceptual knowledge in the human brain. It is still unknown whether semantic memory impairments are caused by localized damage to specialized regions or by diffuse damage to distributed representations within nonspecialized brain areas. To our knowledge, there have been no direct correlations of neuroimaging of in vivo brain function in AD with performance on tasks differentially addressing visual and functional knowledge of living and nonliving concepts. We used a semantic verification task and resting 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography in a group of mild to moderate AD patients to investigate this issue. The four task conditions required semantic knowledge of (1) visual, (2) functional properties of living objects, and (3) visual or (4) functional properties of nonliving objects. Visual property verification of living objects was significantly correlated with left posterior fusiform gyrus metabolism (Brodmann's area [BA] 37/19). Effects of visual and functional property verification for non-living objects largely overlapped in the left anterior temporal (BA 38/20) and bilateral premotor areas (BA 6), with the visual condition extending more into left lateral precentral areas. There were no associations with functional property verification for living concepts. Our results provide strong support for anatomically separable representations of living and nonliving concepts, as well as visual feature knowledge of living objects, and against distributed accounts of semantic memory that view visual and functional features of living and nonliving objects as distributed across a common set of brain areas.
Resumo:
UPTAKE AND METABOLISM OF 5’-AMP IN THE ERYTHROCYTE PLAY KEY ROLES IN THE 5’-AMP INDUCED MODEL OF DEEP HYPOMETABOLISM Publication No. ________ Isadora Susan Daniels, B.A. Supervisory Professor: Cheng Chi Lee, Ph.D. Mechanisms that initiate and control the natural hypometabolic states of mammals are poorly understood. The laboratory developed a model of deep hypometabolism (DH) initiated by uptake of 5’-adenosine monophosphate (5’-AMP) into erythrocytes. Mice enter DH when given a high dose of 5’-AMP and the body cools readily. Influx of 5’-AMP appears to inhibit thermoregulatory control. In a 15°C environment, mice injected with 5’-AMP (0.5 mg/gw) enter a Phase I response in which oxygen consumption (VO2) drops rapidly to 1/3rd of euthermic levels. The Phase I response appears independent of body temperature (Tb). This is followed by gradual body temperature decline that correlates with VO2 decline, called Phase II response. Within 90 minutes, mouse Tb approaches 15°C, and VO2 is 1/10th of normal. Mice can remain several hours in this state, before gradually and safely recovering. The DH state translates to other mammalian species. Our studies show uptake and metabolism of 5’-AMP in erythrocytes causes biochemical changes that initiate DH. Increased AMP shifts the adenylate equilibrium toward ADP formation, consequently decreasing intracellular ATP. In turn, glycolysis slows, indicated by increased glucose and decreased lactate. 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate levels rise, allosterically reducing oxygen affinity for hemoglobin, and deoxyhemoglobin rises. Less oxygen transport to tissues likely triggers the DH model. The major intracellular pathway for AMP catabolism is catalyzed by AMP deaminase (AMPD). Multiple AMPD isozymes are expressed in various tissues, but erythrocytes only have AMPD3. Mice lacking AMPD3 were created to study control of the DH model, specifically in erythrocytes. Telemetric measurements demonstrate lower Tb and difficulty maintaining Tb under moderate metabolic stress. A more dramatic response to lower dose of 5’-AMP suggests AMPD activity in the erythrocyte plays an important role in control of the DH model. Analysis of adenylates in erythrocyte lysate shows 3-fold higher levels of ATP and ADP but similar AMP levels to wild-type. Taken together, results indicate alterations in energy status of erythrocytes can induce a hypometabolic state. AMPD3 control of AMP catabolism is important in controlling the DH model. Genetically reducing AMP catabolism in erythrocytes causes a phenotype of lower Tb and compromised ability to maintain temperature homeostasis.
Resumo:
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, affecting more than 35 million people worldwide. Brain hypometabolism is a major feature of AD, appearing decades before cognitive decline and pathologic lesions. To date, the majority of studies on hypometabolism in AD have used transgenic animal models or imaging studies of the human brain. As it is almost impossible to validate these findings using human tissue, alternative models are required. In this study, we show that human stem cell-derived neuron and astrocyte cultures treated with oligomers of amyloid beta 1-42 (Aβ1-42) also display a clear hypometabolism, particularly with regard to utilization of substrates such as glucose, pyruvate, lactate, and glutamate. In addition, a significant increase in the glycogen content of cells was also observed. These changes were accompanied by changes in NAD+ /NADH, ATP, and glutathione levels, suggesting a disruption in the energy-redox axis within these cultures. The high energy demands associated with neuronal functions such as memory formation and protection from oxidative stress put these cells at particular risk from Aβ-induced hypometabolism. Further research using this model may elucidate the mechanisms associated with Aβ-induced hypometabolism.
Resumo:
Objectives: Adults with major depressive disorder (MDD) are reported to have reduced orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) volumes, which could be related to decreased neuronal density. We conducted a study on medication naive children with MDD to determine whether abnormalities of OFC are present early in the illness course. Methods: Twenty seven medication naive pediatric Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4(th) edition (DSM-IV) MDD patients (mean age +/- SD = 14.4 +/- 2.2 years; 10 males) and 26 healthy controls (mean age +/- SD = 14.4 +/- 2.4 years; 12 males) underwent a 1.5T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with 3D spoiled gradient recalled acquisition. The OFC volumes were compared using analysis of covariance with age, gender, and total brain volume as covariates. Results: There was no significant difference in either total OFC volume or total gray matter OFC volume between MDD patients and healthy controls. Exploratory analysis revealed that patients had unexpectedly larger total right lateral (F = 4.2, df = 1, 48, p = 0.05) and right lateral gray matter (F = 4.6, df = 1, 48, p = 0.04) OFC volumes compared to healthy controls, but this finding was not significant following statistical correction for multiple comparisons. No other OFC subregions showed a significant difference. Conclusions: The lack of OFC volume abnormalities in pediatric MDD patients suggests the abnormalities previously reported for adults may develop later in life as a result of neural cell loss.
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Purpose of review To review neuroimaging findings that have been reported in samples of patients with cardiovascular disorders and their association with the onset of Alzheimer`s disease, vascular dementia, depression and bipolar disorder in the elderly and to highlight the implications of these findings to the knowledge about the pathophysiology of psychiatric disorders in old age, as well as their potential clinical implications. Recent findings Vascular risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, smoking habits and heart failure, have all been associated with signs of cerebrovascular dysfunction, including structural MRI findings of signal hyperintensities, lacunes and stroke and functional imaging findings of brain regional hypoperfusion and hypometabolism. Such brain abnormalities have been found to increase the risk of onset of psychiatric disorder (depression, bipolar and dementia) in old age. Summary As vascular risk factors are potentially modifiable when detected in midlife, the early characterization of brain changes associated with the presence of cardiovascular diseases holds promise to afford clinical applications in psychiatry, providing new perspectives for the prevention of old age psychiatric disorders.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Functional brain variability has been scarcely investigated in cognitively healthy elderly subjects, and it is currently debated whether previous findings of regional metabolic variability are artifacts associated with brain atrophy. The primary purpose of this study was to test whether there is regional cerebral age-related hypometabolism specifically in later stages of life. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MR imaging and FDG-PET data were acquired from 55 cognitively healthy elderly subjects, and voxel-based linear correlations between age and GM volume or regional cerebral metabolism were conducted by using SPM5 in images with and without correction for PVE. To investigate sex-specific differences in the pattern of brain aging, we repeated the above voxelwise calculations after dividing our sample by sex. RESULTS: Our analysis revealed 2 large clusters of age-related metabolic decrease in the overall sample, 1 in the left orbitofrontal cortex and the other in the right temporolimbic region, encompassing the hippocampus, the parahippocampal gyrus, and the amygdala. The division of our sample by sex revealed significant sex-specific age-related metabolic decrease in the left temporolimbic region of men and in the left dorsolateral frontal cortex of women. When we applied atrophy correction to our PET data, none of the above-mentioned correlations remained significant. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that age-related functional brain variability in cognitively healthy elderly individuals is largely secondary to the degree of regional brain atrophy, and the findings provide support to the notion that appropriate PVE correction is a key tool in neuroimaging investigations.
Resumo:
Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare the measured energy expenditure (EE) and the estimated basal EE (BEE) in critically ill patients. Materials and Methods: Seventeen patients from an intensive care unit were randomly evaluated. Indirect calorimetry was performed to calculate patient`s EE, and BEE was estimated by the Harris-Benedict formula. The metabolic state (EE/BEE x 100) was determined according to the following criteria: hypermetabolism, more than 130%; normal metabolism, between 90% and 130%; and hypometabolism, less than 90%. To determine the limits of agreement between EE and BEE, we performed a Bland-Altman analysis. Results: The average EE of patients was 6339 +/- 1119 kJ/d. Two patients were hypermetabolic (11.8%), 4 were hypometabolic (23.5%), and 11 normometabolic (64.7%). Bland-Altman analysis showed a mean of -126 +/- 2135 kJ/d for EE and BEE. Only one patient was outside the limits of agreement between the 2 methods (indirect calorimetry and Harris-Benedict). Conclusions: The calculation of energy needs can be done with the equation of Harris-Benedict associated with lower values of correction factors (approximately 10%) to avoid overfeeding, with constant monitoring of anthropometric and biochemical parameters to assess the nutritional changing and adjust the infusion of energy. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
INTRODUÇÃO: Estudos prévios, com técnicas de imagem, documentam de forma consistente a existência de alterações da substância branca cerebral relacionadas com o envelhecimento (ASBRE). Tais alterações poderão ter um papel importante no declínio funcional do idoso, reflectindo‐se sobretudo no desempenho motor e cognitivo, com repercussão evidente na prática clínica. Apesar disso, a caracterização em definitivo dos fenótipos clínicos e da evolução das ASBRE continua por esclarecer, possivelmente pelas dificuldades metodológicas de que se reveste o seu estudo, incluindo: a adequação das baterias neuropsicológicas, a utilização de amostras de doentes com diferentes graus de severidade e de envolvimento regional, as limitações das diferentes escalas e a sensibilidade dos diferentes métodos de imagem. A Ressonância Magnética (RM) de difusão tem revelado grande sensibilidade para as alterações isquémicas, admitindo‐se que poderá permitir uma melhor caracterização das ASBRE e deste modo possibilitar uma correlação mais precisa com as variáveis cognitivas e motoras, permitindo avaliar ainda a substância branca aparentemente normal (SBAN). OBJECTIVOS: Descrever a evolução imagiológica das ASBRE no intervalo de um ano e analisar a sua expressão clínica e impacto funcional; identificar factores preditivos de progressão das ASBRE e de declínio funcional associado. Descrever a expressão clínica e perfil evolutivo dos doentes com ASBRE com envolvimento preferencial da região parieto‐occipital; comparar este grupo de doentes com os doentes com ASBRE, sem envolvimento preferencial desta região. Medir os coeficientes de difusão aparente (CDA), utilizando regiões de interesse (RDI), em diferentes localizações da substância branca, incluindo substância branca lesada e SBAN, descrever sua evolução temporal no intervalo de um ano e determinar suas correlações clínicas e imagiológicas. MÉTODOS: Utilizando uma amostra de conveniência, foram estudados 30 doentes, com mais de 65 anos, sem incapacidade funcional ou com incapacidade mínima, avaliada pela escala de actividades instrumentais da vida diária (IADL), apresentando ASBRE em TC. Foi utilizado um protocolo exaustivo de avaliação clínica (com particular destaque para as funções motoras e cognitivas) e imagiológica, em dois momentos de avaliação separados por um ano de intervalo (t0 e t1). As ASBRE foram avaliadas com escalas visuais, escala ARWMC e escala de Fazekas, e os doentes foram estudados em função do grau de severidade (ligeiro versus moderado a grave na escala de Fazekas) e de um envolvimento preferencial posterior (definido como 2 ou mais pontos na escala ARWMC na região parieto‐occipital por comparação com a região frontal). Os CDA foram avaliados mediante estudo de RDI, na substância branca frontal lesada (SBFL) e SBAN frontal, parieto‐occipital e dos pedúnculos cerebelosos. Para verificar diferenças na ordem de distribuição das variáveis foi usado o teste de Mann‐Whitney e para comparação de proporções, o teste exacto de Fisher. Na comparação entre a avaliação em t0 e t1 foi usado o teste Wilcoxon Signed Ranks na comparação da distribuição da ordem das variáveis e o teste McNemar na análise de frequências. Na análise correlacional foram utilizados os testes de T para variáveis emparelhadas e as correlações entre estas foram efectuadas com o coeficiente de correlação de Spearman ou de Pearson. O trabalho foi aprovado pela Comissão de Ética do hospital onde foi realizado e todos os doentes incluídos assinaram um consentimento informado. RESULTADOS: A idade média da população estudada foi 72,5 anos (17 doentes eram do sexo masculino). No final de um ano, 1 doente tinha falecido e 3 doentes não completaram a avaliação imagiológica. Registou‐se uma progressão significativa das ASBRE segundo a escala ARWMC (t0: 8,37 / t1: 9,65 ; p<0,001). Na análise funcional, motora e cognitiva, não houve um agravamento significativo. Avaliando os doentes em t0 e t1 segundo o grau de severidade das ASBRE, o grupo com atingimento moderado a grave (ASBRE2) comparado com o grupo com atingimento ligeiro (ASBRE1) apresentava: maior extensão de lesão da substância branca (ARWMC t0: 11,9 / 4,8 ; p<0.001 ; t1: 14,0 / 5,9 ; p<0,001); tendência a pior desempenho funcional (IADL t0: 90,7 / 99,2 ; p=0,023; t1: 86,4 / 96,7 ; p=n.s.) e motor (SPPB t0: 9,8 / 10,3 ; p=n.s. ; t1: 9,5 / 10,5 ; p=0,058); tendência a maior compromisso do humor (Escala Cornell t0: 6,7 / 3,5 ; p=0,037; t1: 6,2 / 4,5 ; p=n.s.). Analisando a evolução, de t0 para t1, de cada um dos grupos (ASBRE2 e ASBRE1) registou‐se: aumento da extensão da lesão da substância branca em ambos (ASBRE2: 12,0 / 14,0;z=‐2,687 ; p=0,007; ASBR1: 4,8 / 5,9 ; z=‐2,724 ; p=0,006); variação não significativa funcional e motora; tendência ao agravamento em ambos na prova de Cancelamento de dígitos (ASBRE2: 17,5 / 17,4 ; p=n.s. ; ASBRE1: 19,9 / 16,9 ; z=‐2,096 ; p=0,036);tendência à melhoria em ambos no MMS (ASBRE2: 25,7 / 27,5 ; z=‐2,155 ; p=0,031; ASBRE1: 27,5 / 28,2 ; p=n.s). Avaliando os doentes em t0 e t1 em função do padrão de distribuição das ASBRE, os doentes com um envolvimento preferencial posterior (ASBREP) comparados com os restantes (ASBREnP), apresentavam: maior extensão da lesão (ARWMC t0: 10,8 / 6,9 ; p=0,025; t1: 12,9 / 7,6 ; p=0,011); diferenças não significativas no desempenho motor; tendência a melhor desempenho na prova dos Labirintos (t0: 8,1 / 11,8 ; p=0,06; t1: 8,7 / 9,5 ; p=n.s.) e Cancelamento de dígitos (t0: 20,9 / 17,4 ; p=0,045; t1: 18,5 / 16,3 ; p=n.s.); tendência a maior compromisso depressivo na GDS (t0: 5,0 / 3,68 ; p=n.s. ; t1: 5,7 / 3,3 p=0,033). Analisando o perfil evolutivo de t0 para t1, registou‐se: aumento da extensão da lesão nos dois grupos (ASBREP: 10,8 / 12,9 ; z=‐2,555 ; P=0,011; ASBREnP: 6,4 / 7,6 ; z=‐2,877 ; p=0,04); variação em sentidos diferentes com melhoria funcional no grupo ASBREP (91,0 / 95,5 ; z=‐0,926 ; p=0,036) e agravamento no grupo ASBREnP (96,7 / 89,8 ; z=‐2,032 ; p=0,042); variação sem sentidos diferentes, com agravamento significativo no grupo ASBREnP no item estação de pé do SPPB (ASBREP 3,8/3,9 p=n.s.; ASBREnP 3,9/3,6; z=‐2,236 ; p=0,025); tendência à melhoria nos dois grupos no MMS (ASBREP: 27,2 / 28,2 ; p=n.s.; ASBREnP: 26,3 / 27,7 ; z=‐2,413 ; p=0,016) e tendência em sentidos diferentes no Trail Making, com eventual melhoria no grupo ASBREP (113,9 / 91,6 ; p=n.s.) e agravamento no grupo ASBREnP (113,7 / 152,0 ; z=‐2,155 ; p=0,031). Na análise da imagem, utilizando a escala ARWMC e o estudo dos CDA, na avaliação transversal na inclusão, a comparação entre as pontuações médias da escala ARWML nas diferentes regiões mostrava diferenças significativas (F=39,54 , p<0,0001). A análise comparativa post‐hoc de Bonferroni mostrou valores significativamente mais altos para as regiões frontais e parieto‐occipitais (p<0,0001). Os valores médios dos CDA eram significativamente diferentes entre regiões (F=44,56; p<0,0001), sendo mais altos na SBFL (p<0,0001). Não existia diferença significativa entre os valores registados na SBAN nas regiões frontais e parieto‐occipitais. As pontuações regionais da escala ARWMC e os valores médios dos CDA correlacionavam‐se todos de forma positiva. A pontuação da escala ARWMC na região frontal correlacionava‐se significativamente com os valores do CDA da SBFL (r=0,467 ; p=0,012). Existia tendência para uma correlação positiva entre as pontuações da escala ARWMC na região frontal e os valores médios dos CDA na SBAN frontal (r=0,276 ; p=0,155). As pontuações da escala ARWMC e os CDA correlacionavam‐se de forma positiva com a idade e com a tensão arterial (TA). Foram encontradas correlações significativas entre: idade e SBAN frontal (r=0,440 ; p=0,019); TA diastólica e SBFL (r=0,386 ; p=0,034); TA sistólica e SBAN Parieto‐occipital (r=0,407 ; P=0,032). Na avaliação motora e cognitiva, dado elevado número de variáveis, foi efectuada uma análise de factor principal. Registou‐se uma tendência global negativa na correlação entre as pontuações da escala visual na região frontal, os valores dos CDA, e o desempenho motor e cognitivo. Na análise evolutiva, (n=19), registou‐se variação significativa dos CDA, com aumento na SBFL (Direita: z=‐2,875 ; p=0,004 ; Esquerda: z=‐2,113 ; p=0,035) e diminuição na SBAN dos pedúnculos cerebelosos (Direita: z=‐2,094 ; p=0,036 ; Esquerda: z=‐1,989 ; p=0,047). Foi observada uma correlação negativa entre a variação do CDA na SBAN dos pedúnculos cerebelosos e na SBFL contralateral (SBAN pedúnculo cerebeloso Esquerdo / SBFL Direita: r=‐0,133 ; p=n.s.; SBAN pedúnculo cerebeloso Direito / SBFL Esquerda: r=‐0,561 ; p=0,012). Os valores dos CDA à direita correlacionavam‐se de forma positiva com a velocidade da marcha (r=0,562 ; p=0,012). CONCLUSÕES: A progressão das ASBRE pode ser observada com uma escala visual detalhada no intervalo de um ano. Contudo, o eventual agravamento da incapacidade funcional, motora e cognitiva, não parece ser apreciável em igual intervalo de tempo. A maior severidade das ASBRE associa‐se a uma tendência para um maior compromisso funcional, motor e possivelmente do humor. A questão da progressão em escalas simplificadas, de um estádio ligeiro para um estádio moderado a grave, não é elucidada pelos resultados do presente trabalho. Os doentes com um envolvimento preferencial da região parieto‐occipital poderão constituir um subgrupo distinto que, apesar de ter maior extensão de lesão, parece ter um melhor desempenho motor e cognitivo. O perfil evolutivo destes doentes parece igualmente ser distinto, não se observando a tendência ao agravamento funcional, motor e cognitivo (sobretudo em provas de função executiva) que se encontra nos restantes doentes. A análise transversal na inclusão, utilizando uma escala visual e o estudo dos CDA, sugere que a severidade das ASBRE se correlaciona com o compromisso motor e cognitivo, bem como com a idade e com a TA. Uma maior vulnerabilidade da substância branca frontal à lesão vascular parece ter um papel importante no compromisso motor e na disfunção executiva, (essencialmente à custa do compromisso da atenção), possivelmente associada à desconexão dos circuitos fronto‐subcorticais. A análise dos CDA sugere que isso é válido igualmente para a SBAN e sublinha que, as imagens de RM convencional poderão não traduzir a verdadeira extensão da lesão e consequentemente do compromisso motor e cognitivo. A relação entre a progressão da doença vascular em lesões frontais constituídas e a redução do CDA no pedúnculo cerebeloso contralateral poderá estar associada a um pior desempenho motor. A disrupção dos circuitos fronto‐cerebelosos, determinando hipometabolismo e diminuição da perfusão no cerebelo, poderá ser responsável pela diminuição do CDA no cerebelo. ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION: Previous studies, with new imaging techniques, have consistently documented the presence of age‐related white matter lesions (ARWML), emphasizing their role in agerelated functional decline, mainly related to motor and cognitive impairment, and inherent consequences in clinical practice. However clinical significance of ARWML remains to be elucidated, probably on account of methodological difficulties such as: specific neuropsychological batteries, utilization of samples with different degrees of severity and regional involvement, utilization of different imaging scales and different sensitivity of imaging techniques. Recently, Diffusion Weighted Magnetic Ressonance imaging (DWI) has shown a higher sensitivity to ischemic lesions, suggesting it might be superior for characterization of ARWML, allowing more precise correlation with motor and cognitive variables, and evaluating also normal appearing white matter (NAWM). OBJECTIVES: To describe imagiologic evolution of ARWML within one year interval and to analyse its clinical and functional significance. To identify predictors of ARWML progression and associated functional impairment. To describe clinical characteristics and evolution profile of patients with predominantly posterior lesions; to compare this group of patients with patients without predominantly posterior lesions. To study average Apparent Diffusion Coeficcients (ADC) in different white matter regions using regions of interest (ROI); to analyse their evolution profile and to determine their clinical and imagiologic correlations. METHODS: A sample of 30 patients older than 65 years, without functional impairment or with minimal impairment, according to the Instrumental Activities of Daily Lliving scale, with ARWML on CT scan, were studied in a cross‐sectional design. An extensive clinical(with detailed motor and cognitive evaluation) and imagiologic protocol was applied in two one‐year interval separate moments (t0 and t1). ARWML were studied using visual scales, ARWMC and Fazekas’s scale, and patients were studied according to degree of severity (Fazekas scale mild versus moderate / severe) and preferential involvement of the posterior region (defined as 2 or more points in the ARWMC scale in the parietooccipital region compared with frontal region). Evaluation of ADC was performed using ROI in frontal lesioned white matter (FLWM) and NAWM (frontal, parieto‐occipital and cerebellar regions). To study differences in the distribution of variables the Mann‐Whitney test was used and to compare proportions the exact Fisher Test was used. To compare temporal evolution profile between t0 and t1, the Wilcoxon Signed ranks Test was used to analyse the distribution of variables and the Mc Nemar Test to analyse frequencies. Correlation analysis was performed using Spearman or Pearson tests. The study was approved by the local Ethics Committee and all patients signed an informed consent. RESULTS: Mean age was 72.5 years (17 patients were male). By the end of the study, one patient was dead and 3 patients did not undergo brain imaging. There was a higher extent of ARWML evaluated with the ARWMC scale (t0: 8.37 / t1: 9.65 ; p<0.001). Functional, motor and cognitive performance did not progress significantly. Evaluating patients in t0 and t1 according to the degree of severity (Fazekas scale), the moderate / severe group of patients (WML2), compared with the mild group (WML1), showed: higher extent of lesion (ARWMC scale t0: 11.9 / 4.8 ; p<0.001 ; t1: 14.0 / 5.9 ; p<0.001); tendency to worse functional (IADL t0: 90.7 / 99.2 ; p=0.023; t1: 86.4 / 96.7 ; p=n.s.) and motor (SPPB t0: 9.8 / 10.3 ; p=n.s. ; t1: 9.5 / 10.5 ; p=0.058) performance; tendency to higher depressive scores (Cornell Scale t0: 6.7 / 3.5 ; p=0.037; t1: 6.2 / 4.5; p=n.s.). Analysing the evolution profile from t0 to t1 of each group (WML2 and WML1), there was a higher extent of lesion (ARWMC scale) in both (WML2: 12.0 / 14.0; z=‐2.687 ; p=0.007; WML1: 4.8 / 5.9 ; z=‐2.724 ; p=0.006); non‐significant variation in functional and motor performances; tendency to worse performance on the Digit Cancelling (WML2: 17.5 / 17.4 ; p=n.s. ; WML1: 19.9 / 16.9 ; z=‐2.096 ; p=0,036) and to better performance on the MMS (WML2: 25.7 / 27.5 ; z=‐2.155 ; p=0.031; WML1: 27.5/ 28.2 ; p=n.s). Evaluating patients in t0 and t1 according to the regional distribution of ARWML, patients with predominantly posterior lesions (WMLP) compared with the rest of the group (WMLnP), showed: higher extent of lesion (ARWMC scale t0: 10.8 / 6.9 ; p=0.025; t1:12.9 / 7.6 ; p=0.011); non significant differences on motor evaluation; tendency to a better performance on Maze (t0: 8.1 / 11.8 ; p=0.06; t1: 8.7 / 9.5 ; p=n.s.) and Digit cancelling (t0: 20.9 / 17.4 ; p=0.045; t1: 18.5 / 16.3 ; p=n.s.) tests;tendency to higher scores on GDS (t0: 5.0 / 3.68 ; p=n.s. ; t1: 5.7 / 3.3 p=0.033). Analysing the evolution profile from t0 to t1 of each group (WMLP and WMLnP), there was: higher extent of lesion (ARWMC scale) in both groups (WMLP: 10.8 / 12.9 ;z=‐2,555 ; P=0,011; WMLnP: 6.4 / 7.6 ; z=‐2.877; p=0.04); variation in different directions with better functional performance in the group WMLP (91.0 / 95.5 ;z=‐0.926 ; p=0.036) and worse in WMLnP (96.7 / 89.8 ; z=‐2.032 ; p=0.042); variation in different directions with worse motor performance in one SPPB item (total stands) in the group WMLnP (WMLP 3.8/3.9 p=n.s.; ASBREnP 3.9/3.6; z=‐2.236 ; p=0.025);tendency to improvement in both groups in MMS (WMLP: 27.2 / 28.2 ; p=n.s.; WMLnP:26.3 / 27.7 ; z=‐2.413 ; p=0.016); tendency to a variation in different directions in the Trail Making Test, with possible improvement in the group WMLP (113.9 / 91.6 ;p=n.s.) and worsening in the group WMLnP (113.7 / 152.0 ; z=‐2.155 ; p=0.031). Imaging analysis in the inclusion, using the ARWMC scale and ADC evaluation, showed significant differences in different regions (F=39.54, p<0.0001). Comparative post‐hoc Bonferroni analysis showed significantly higher scores in the frontal and parieto‐occipital regions (p<0.0001. ADC values were significantly different between regions (F=44.56; p<0.0001), being higher in FLWM (p<0‐0001). There was no significant difference between ADC in NAWM in frontal and parieto‐occipital regions. ARWMC scores and ADC values correlated positively. Significant correlations were found between frontal ARWMC score and FLWM ADC values (r=0.467 ; p=0.012). ARWMC scores and ADC values correlated positively with age and blood pressure. Significant correlations were: age and frontal NAWM (r=0.440 ; p=0.019); Diastolic blood pressure and FLWM (r=0.386 ; p=0.034); sistolic blood pressure and parietooccipital NAWM (r=0.407 ; P=0.032). Due to the higher number of motor and cognitive variables a preliminary study was done, using principal component analysis. A global tendency to a negative correlation was found between ARWMC scores, ADC values and motor and cognitive performances. Evolutive analysis of ADC (n=19), showed a significant variation, with higher values in t1 in FLWM (Right: z=‐2.875 ; p=0.004 ; Left: z=‐2.113 ; p=0.035) and lower values in t1 in cerebellar NAWM (Right: z=‐2.094 ; p=0.036 ; Left: z=‐1.989 ; p=0.047). A negative correlation was found between ADC variation in cerebellar NAWM and contralateral FLWM (Left cerebellar NAWM / Right FLWM: r=‐0.133 ; p=n.s.; Right cerebellar NAWM/ Left FLWM: r=‐0.561 ; p=0.012). ADC values on the right correlated positively with walking speed (r=0,562 ; p=0,012). CONCLUSIONS: Progression of ARWML can be documented with a detailed visual scale in a one year interval. However, functional, motor and cognitive impairment, do not seem to progress significantly within the same period. A higher severity of ARWML is associated with a tendency to a worse functional and motor performance (and possibly to higher scores in depression scales). The issue of progression in a simplified visual scale from a mild to a moderate / severe degree of ARWML is not further elucidated. Patients with predominantly posterior lesions may be a subset of ARWML patients, with a different profile, that despite higher extent of lesion, seem to fair better than the rest of the group, namely with better performance on motor and cognitive tests. Evolution profile of this subset of patients also seems to be different, without a clearcut tendency to worsening functional, motor and cognitive (particularly for executive function tests) performance that is observed in the rest of the group. Imaging analysis, with a visual scale and ADC evaluation, suggests that severity of ARWML correlates negatively with cognitive and motor performance and positively with age and blood pressure. A higher vulnerability of frontal white matter to vascular disease seems to play an important role in motor and cognitive dysfunction, mainly determined by impairment of attention skills associated with frontal‐subcortical disconnection. DWI results, suggest that this may also be true for NAWM, underlining that conventional MR images may not represent the true extent of cognitive decline. The relation between vascular disease progression inside frontal lesions and ADC reduction in contralateral cerebellar peduncles, may be associated with a worse motor performance. Disruption of fronto‐cerebellar cicuits, with associated regional hypometabolism, may be responsible for the reduction of cerebellar ADC.
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RESUMO:Contexto: A avaliação do estado de nutrição do doente com indicação para transplante hepático (TH) deve ser abrangente, considerando o amplo espetro de situações clínicas e metabólicas. As alterações metabólicas relacionadas com a doença hepática podem limitar a aplicação de métodos de avaliação nutricional, subestimando a desnutrição. Após o TH, é expectável a reversão dos distúrbios metabólicos da doença hepática, pela melhoria da função do fígado. No entanto, algumas complicações metabólicas podem surgir após o TH, relacionadas com a má-nutrição, a desnervação hepática e o uso prolongado de imunossupressão, comprometendo os resultados clínicos a longo-prazo. A medição longitudinal e confiável do metabolismo energético e dos compartimentos corporais após o TH, avaliada em conjunto com fatores influentes no estado de nutrição, pode identificar precocemente situações de risco e otimizar e individualizar estratégias clínicas e nutricionais com vantagens no prognóstico. Objetivo: Avaliar longitudinalmente, a curto prazo, o estado de nutrição após o TH em doentes com insuficiência hepática por doença crónica e identificar os fatores, para além da cirurgia, que determinam diferentes evoluções do metabolismo energético e da composição corporal. Métodos: Foi estudada uma coorte de indivíduos com indicação para TH por doença hepática crónica, admitidos consecutivamente para TH ortotópico eletivo, durante 2 anos. Foram programados 3 momentos de avaliação: na última consulta pré-TH (T0), logo que adquirida autonomia respiratória e funcional após o TH (T1) e um mês após o TH (T2). Nesses momentos, foram medidos no mesmo dia: o suprimento nutricional por recordatório das últimas 24 horas, o estado de nutrição por Avaliação Subjetiva Global (ASG), o gasto energético em repouso (GER) por calorimetria indireta, a antropometria, a composição corporal por bioimpedância elétrica tetrapolar multifrequências e a força muscular por dinamometria de preensão palmar. O índice de massa magra (IMM) e a massa celular corporal (MCC) foram usados como indicadores do músculo esquelético e a percentagem de massa gorda (%MG) e o índice de massa gorda (IMG) como indicadores de adiposidade. O GER foi comparado com o estimado pelas fórmulas de Harris-Benedict para classificação do estado metabólico em:hipermetabolismo (GER medido >120% do GER estimado), normometabolismo (GER medido entre 80 e 120% do GER estimado) e hipometabolismo (GER medido <80% do GER estimado). Foi utilizada análise multivariável: por regressão logística, para identificar variáveis associadas à possibilidade (odds ratio – OR) de pertencer a cada grupo metabólico pré-TH; por regressão linear múltipla, para identificar variáveis associadas à variação dos compartimentos corporais no período pós-TH; e por modelos de efeitos mistos generalizados, para identificar variáveis associadas à evolução do GER e dos compartimentos corporais entre o período pré- e pós-TH. Resultados: Foram incluídos 56 indivíduos com idade, média (DP), 53,7 (8,5) anos, 87,5% do sexo masculino, 23,2% com doença hepática crónica de etiologia etanólica. Após o TH, em 60,7% indivíduos foi administrado regime imunossupressor baseado no tacrolimus. Os indivíduos foram avaliados [mediana (AIQ)] 90,5 (P25: 44,2; P75: 134,5) dias antes do TH (T0), 9,0 (P25: 7,0; P75: 12,0) dias após o TH (T1) e 36,0 (P25: 31,0; P75: 43,0) dias após o TH (T2). Após o TH houve melhoria significativa do estado de nutrição, com diminuição da prevalência de desnutrição classificada pela ASG (37,5% em T0, 16,1% em T2, p<0,001). Antes do TH, 41,1% dos indivíduos eram normometabólicos, 37,5% hipometabólicos e 21,4% hipermetabólicos. A possibilidade de pertencer a cada grupo metabólico pré-TH associou-se à: idade (OR=0,899, p=0,010) e desnutrição pela ASG (OR=5,038, p=0,015) para o grupo normometabólico; e índice de massa magra (IMM, OR=1,264, p=0,049) e etiologia viral da doença hepática (OR=8,297, p=0,019) para o grupo hipermetabólico. Não se obteve modelo múltiplo para o grupo de hipometabólico pré-TH, mas foram identificadas associações univariáveis com a história de toxicodependência (OR=0,282, p=0,047) e com a sarcopénia pré- TH (OR=8,000, p=0,040). Após o TH, houve normalização significativa e progressiva do estado metabólico, indicada pelo aumento da prevalência de normometabolismo (41,1% em T0, 57,1% em T2, p=0,040). Foram identificados diferentes perfis de evolução do GER após o TH, estratificado pelo estado metabólico pré-TH: no grupo hipometabólico pré-TH, o GER (Kcal) aumentou significativa e progressivamente (1030,6 em T0; 1436,1 em T1, p=0,001; 1659,2 em T2, p<0,001); no grupo hipermetabólico pré-TH o GER diminuiu significativa e progressivamente (2097,1 em T0; 1662,5 em T1, p=0,024; 1493,0 em T2, p<0.001); no grupo normometabólico não houve variações significativas. Os perfis de evolução do GER associaram-se com: peso corporal (β=9,6, p<0,001) e suprimento energético (β=13,6, p=0,005) na amostra total; com peso corporal (β=7,1, p=0,018) e contributo energético dos lípidos (β=18,9, p=0,003) no grupo hipometabólico pré-TH; e com peso corporal (β=14,1, p<0,001) e desnutrição pela ASG (β=-171,0, p=0,007) no grupo normometabólico pré-TH.Houve redução transitória dos compartimentos corporais entre T0 e T1, mas a maioria destes recuperou para valores semelhantes aos pré-TH. As exceções foram a água extracelular, que diminuiu entre T0 e T2 (média 18,2 L e 17,8 L, p=0,042), a massa gorda (média 25,1 Kg e 21,7 Kg, p<0,001) e o IMG (média 10,6 Kg.m-2 e 9,3 Kg.m-2, p<0,001) que diminuíram entre T1 e T2. Relativamente à evolução dos indicadores de músculo esquelético e adiposidade ao longo do estudo: a evolução do IMM associou-se com força de preensão palmar (β=0,06, p<0,001), creatininémia (β=2,28, p<0,001) e número total de fármacos administrados (β=-0,21, p<0,001); a evolução da MCC associou-se com força de preensão palmar (β=0,16, p<0,001), creatininémia (β=4,17, p=0,008) e número total de fármacos administrados (β=-0,46, p<0,001); a evolução da %MG associou-se com força de preensão palmar (β=-0,11, p=0,028), história de toxicodependência (β=-5,75, p=0,024), creatininémia (β=-5,91, p=0,004) e suprimento proteico (β=-0,06, p=0,001); a evolução do IMG associou-se com história de toxicodependência (β=- 2,64, p=0,019), creatininémia (β=-2,86, p<0,001) e suprimento proteico (β=-0,02, p<0,001). A variação relativa (%Δ) desses compartimentos corporais entre T1 e T2 indicou o impacto da terapêutica imunossupressora na composição corporal: o regime baseado na ciclosporina associou-se positivamente com a %Δ do IMM (β=23,76, p<0,001) e %Δ da MCC (β=26,58, p<0,001) e negativamente com a %Δ MG (β=-25,64, p<0,001) e %Δ do IMG (β=-25,62, p<0,001), relativamente ao regime baseado no tacrolimus. Os esteróides não influenciaram a evolução do GER nem com a dos compartimentos corporais. Conclusões: O estado de nutrição, avaliado por ASG, melhorou significativamente após o TH, traduzida pela diminuição da prevalência de desnutrição. O normometabolismo pré-TH foi prevalente e associou-se à menor idade e à desnutrição pré- TH. O hipometabolismo pré-TH associou-se à história de toxicodependência e à sarcopénia pré-TH. O hipermetabolismo pré-TH associou-se ao maior IMM e à etiologia viral da doença hepática. Após o TH, houve normalização progressiva do estado metabólico. Foram identificados três perfis de evolução do GER, associando-se com: peso corporal e suprimento energético na amostra total; peso corporal e contributo energético dos lípidos no grupo hipometabólico pré- TH; e peso corporal e desnutrição pela ASG no grupo normometabólico pré-TH. Foram identificados diferentes perfis de evolução da composição corporal após TH. A evolução do músculo esquelético associou-se positivamente com a força de preensão palmar e a creatininémia e negativamente com o número total de fármacos administrados. A evolução da adiposidade (%MG e IMG) associou-se inversamente com a história de toxicodependência, a creatininémia e o suprimento proteico; adicionalmente, a %MG associou-se inversamente com a força de preensão palmar. O regime baseado na ciclosporina associou-se independentemente com diminuição da adiposidade e aumento do músculo esquelético, comparativamente ao regime baseado no tacrolimus.---------------------------ABSTRACT:Background: The assessment of nutritional status in patients undergoing liver transplantation (LTx) should be comprehensive, accounting for the wide spectrum of the clinical and metabolic conditions. The metabolic disturbances related to liver disease may limit the precision and accuracy of traditional nutritional assessment methods underestimating the undernourishment. After LTx, it is expected that many metabolic derangements improve with the recovery of liver function. However, some metabolic complications arising after LTx, related to nutritional status, hepatic denervation, and prolonged immunosuppression, may compromise the longterm outcome. A reliable longitudinal assessment of both energy metabolism and body compartments after LTx, combined with assessments of other factors potentially affecting the nutritional status, may enable a better interpretation on the relationship between the metabolic and the nutritional status. These reliable assessments may precociously identify nutritional risk conditions and optimize and customize clinical and nutritional strategies improving the prognosis. Objective: To assess longitudinally the nutritional status shortly after orthotopic LTx in patients with chronic liver disease, and identify factors, beyond surgery, determining different energy metabolism and body composition profiles.Methods: A cohort of consecutive patients who underwent LTx due to chronic liver disease was studied within a period of two years. The assessments were performed in three occasions: at the last visit before LTx (T0), after surgery as soon as respiratory and functional autonomy was established (T1), and approximately one month after surgery (T2). On each occasion all assessments were performed on the same day, and included: the dietary assessment by 24- hour dietary recall, nutritional status by the Subjective Global Assessment (SGA), the resting energy expenditure (REE) by indirect calorimetry, anthropometry, body composition by multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis, and muscle strength by handgrip strength. Both the lean mass index (LMI) and body cell mass (BCM) were used as surrogates of skeletal muscle, and both the percentage of fat mass (%FM) and fat mass index (FMI) of adiposity. The REE was predicted according to the Harris and Benedict equation. Hypermetabolism was defined as a measured REE more than 120% of the predicted value; normometabolism as a measured REE within 80-120% of the predicted value; and hypometabolism as a measured REE less than 80% of the predicted value. Multiple regression analysis was used: by logistic regression to identify variables associated with odds of belong each pre-LTx metabolic groups; by linear multiple regression analysis to identify variables associated with body compartments relative variations (%Δ) in the post-LTx period; and by mixed effects models to identify variables associated with the REE and body compartments profiles pre- and post-LTx. Results: Fifty six patients with a mean (SD) of 53.7 (8.5) years of age were included, 87.5% were men and 23.2% with alcoholic liver disease. After LTx 60.7% individuals were assigned to tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive regimen. The patients were assessed at a median time (inter-quartil range) of 90.5 (P25 44.2; P75 134.5) days before LTx (T0), at a median time of 9.0 (P25 7.0; P75 12.0) (T1) and 36 (P25 31.0; P75 43.0) (T2) days after LTx. After LTx the nutritional status significantly improved: the SGA-undernourishment decreased from 37.5% (T0) to 16.1% (T2) (p<0.001). Before LTx, 41.1% patients were normometabolic, 37.5% hypometabolic, and 21.4% hypermetabolic. The predictors of each pre-LTx metabolic group were: age (OR=0.899, p=0.010) and SGA-undernourishment (OR=5.038, p=0.015) for the normometabolic group; and LMI (OR=1.264, p=0.049) and viral etiology of liver disease (OR=8.297, p=0.019) for the hypermetabolic group. No multiple model was found for the pre-LTx hypometabolic group, but univariate association was found with history of drug addiction (OR=0.282, p=0.047) and pre- LTx sarcopenia (OR=8.000, p=0.040). After LTx a significant normalization of the metabolic status occurred, indicated by the increase in the prevalence of normometabolic patients (from T0: 41.1% to T2: 57.1%, p=0.040). Different REE profiles were found with REE stratified by preoperative metabolic status: in the hypometabolic group a significant progressive increase in mean REE (Kcal) was observed (T0: 1030.6; T1: 1436.1, p=0.001; T2: 1659.2, p<0.001); in the hypermetabolic group, a significant progressive decrease in mean REE (Kcal) was observed (T0: 2097.1; T1: 1662.5, p=0.024; T2: 1493.0, p<0.001); and in the normometabolic group, no significant differences were found. The REE profiles were associated with: body weight (β- estimate=9.6, p<0.001) and energy intake (β-estimate=13.6, p=0.005) in the whole sample; with body weight (β-estimate=7.1, p=0.018) and %TEV from lipids (β-estimate=18.9, p=0.003) in the hypometabolic group; and with body weight (β-estimate=14.1, p<0.001), and SGAundernourishment (β-estimate=-171, p=0.007) in the normometabolic group. A transient decrease in most body compartments occurred from T0 to T1, with subsequent catch-up to similar preoperative values. Exceptions were the extracellular water, decreasing from T0 to T2 (mean 18.2 L to 17.8 L, p=0.042), the fat mass (mean 25.1 Kg to 21.7 Kg, p<0.001) and FMI (mean 10.6 Kg.m-2 to 9.3 Kg.m-2, p<0.001), decreasing from T1 to T2. Significant predictors of skeletal muscle and adiposity profiles were found: LMI evolution was associated with handgrip strength (β-estimate=0.06, p<0.001), serum creatinine (β- estimate=2.28, p<0.001) and number of medications (β-estimate=-0.21, p<0.001); BCM evolution was associated with handgrip strength (β-estimate=0.16, p<0.001), serum creatinine (β-estimate=4.17, p<0.001) and number of medications (β-estimate=-0.46, p<0.001); the %FM evolution was associated with handgrip strength (β-estimate=-0.11, p=0.028), history of drug addiction (β-estimate=-5.75, p=0.024), serum creatinine (β-estimate=-5.91, p=0.004) and protein intake (β-estimate=-0.06, p=0.001); and FMI evolution was associated with history of drug addiction (β-estimate=-2.64, p=0.019), serum creatinine (β-estimate=-2.86, p<0.001) and protein intake (β-estimate=-0.02, p<0.001). The %Δ of the aforementioned body compartments from T1 to T2 indicated the influence of immunosuppressive agents on body composition: the cyclosporine-based regimen, compared with tacrolimus-based regimen, was positively associated with %Δ LMI (β-estimate=23.76, p<0.001) and %Δ BCM (β- estimate=26.58, p<0.001), and inversely associated with %Δ FM (β-estimate=-25.64, p<0.001) and %Δ FMI (β-estimate=-25.62, p<0.001). No significant changes in REE or body composition were observed associated with dose or duration of steroid therapy. Conclusions: The SGA-assessed nutritional status improved shortly after LTx, with significant decrease in prevalence undernourished individuals. XXI Preoperative normometabolism was prevalent and was associated with younger age and SGAundernourishment before LTx. Preoperative hypometabolism was associated with history of drug addiction and pre-LTx sarcopenia. Preoperative hypermetabolism was associated with higher LMI and viral etiology of liver disease. A significant normalization of the metabolic status was observed after LTx. The REE profiles were positively predicted by body weight and energy intake in the whole sample, by body weight and percentage of energy intake from lipids in the preoperative hypometabolic patients, and by body weight and SGA–undernourishment in the preoperative normometabolic patients. Different body composition profiles were found after LTx. Skeletal muscle profile was positively associated with handgrip strength and serum creatinine, and inversely with the number of medications. The adiposity profile was inversely associated with history of drug addiction, serum creatinine and protein intake. Additionally, the %FM evolution was inversely associated with handgrip strength. The cyclosporine-based regimen, compared with tacrolimus-based regimen, was independently associated with skeletal muscle increase and adiposity decrease.
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Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) is a group of neurodegenerative dementing disorders characterized by initial predominant visual complaints followed by progressive decline in cognitive functions. The visuospatial and visuoperceptual defects arise from the dysfunction of, respectively, the dorsal (occipito-parietal) and the ventral (occipito-temporal) streams. Clinical symptoms, results of neuropsychological examination, and findings of posterior cerebral atrophy and/or posterior hypoperfusion/hypometabolism contribute to the diagnosis. However, owing to the insidious onset of PCA and the non-specificity of initial symptoms, the diagnosis is often delayed. Specific etiologies include Alzheimer's disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, subcortical gliosis, corticobasal degeneration, and prion-associated diseases. Alzheimer's disease accounts for at least 80 % of PCA cases. Recent research has concentrated on better defining the clinical presentation of PCA, improving neuroimaging analysis, testing new neuroimaging techniques, and developing biological measurements. Selected recent papers on PCA are reviewed in this article.
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We report the case of a 37-year-old man suffering from insidious visual agnosia and spastic paraparesis due to a PSEN1 mutation. His mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer disease after a biopsy. He was assessed by multimodal neuroimaging, including new in vivo positron emission tomography amyloid imaging (F-AV45). His data were compared with those from healthy participants and patients with sporadic predemential Alzheimer disease. He exhibited posterior cortical thickness reduction, posterior hypometabolism, and increased amyloid ligand uptake in the posterior cortex and the striatum. We show that F-AV45 positron emission tomography allows visualization of the unusual pattern of amyloid deposits that co-localize with cortical atrophy in this genetic form of Alzheimer disease.
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Antemortem demonstration of ischemia has proved elusive in head injury because regional CBF reductions may represent hypoperfusion appropriately coupled to hypometabolism. Fifteen patients underwent positron emission tomography within 24 hours of head injury to map cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral oxygen metabolism (CMRO2), and oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). We estimated the volume of ischemic brain (IBV) and used the standard deviation of the OEF distribution to estimate the efficiency of coupling between CBF and CMRO2. The IBV in patients was significantly higher than controls (67 +/- 69 vs. 2 +/- 3 mL; P < 0.01). The coexistence of relative ischemia and hyperemia in some patients implies mismatching of perfusion to oxygen use. Whereas the saturation of jugular bulb blood (SjO2) correlated with the IBV (r = 0.8, P < 0.01), SjO2 values of 50% were only achieved at an IBV of 170 +/- 63 mL (mean +/- 95% CI), which equates to 13 +/- 5% of the brain. Increases in IBV correlated with a poor Glasgow Outcome Score 6 months after injury (rho = -0.6, P < 0.05). These results suggest significant ischemia within the first day after head injury. The ischemic burden represented by this "traumatic penumbra" is poorly detected by bedside clinical monitors and has significant associations with outcome.
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The early diagnostic value of glucose hypometabolism and atrophy as potential neuroimaging biomarkers of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been extensively explored using [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The vast majority of previous imaging studies neglected the effects of single factors, such as age, symptom severity or time to conversion in MCI thus limiting generalisability of results across studies. Here, we investigated the impact of these factors on metabolic and structural differences. FDG-PET and MRI data from AD patients (n = 80), MCI converters (n = 65) and MCI non-converters (n = 64) were compared to data of healthy subjects (n = 79). All patient groups were split into subgroups by age, time to conversion (for MCI), or symptom severity and compared to the control group. AD patients showed a strongly age-dependent pattern, with younger patients showing significantly more extensive reductions in gray matter volume and glucose utilisation. In the MCI converter group, the amount of glucose utilisation reduction was linked to the time to conversion but not to atrophy. Our findings indicate that FDG-PET might be more closely linked to future cognitive decline whilst MRI being more closely related to the current cognitive state reflects potentially irreversible damage.