Title | Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping of Amyloid-β Aggregates in Alzheimer's Disease with 7T MR. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2018 |
Authors | Tiepolt, S, Schäfer, A, Rullmann, M, Roggenhofer, E, Gertz, H-J, Schroeter, ML, Patt, M, Bazin, P-L, Jochimsen, TH, Turner, R, Sabri, O, Barthel, H |
Corporate Authors | Netherlands Brain Bank |
Journal | J Alzheimers Dis |
Volume | 64 |
Issue | 2 |
Pagination | 393-404 |
Date Published | 2018 |
ISSN | 1875-8908 |
Abstract | BACKGROUND: PET imaging is an established technique to detect cerebral amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques in vivo. Some preclinical and postmortem data report an accumulation of redox-active iron near Aβ plaques. Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) at high-field MRI enables iron deposits to be depicted with high spatial resolution. OBJECTIVE: Aim of this study was to examine whether iron and Aβ plaque accumulation is related and thus, whether 7T MRI might be an additive diagnostic tool to Aβ PET imaging. METHODS: Postmortem human Alzheimer's disease (AD) and healthy control (HC) frontal gray matter (GM) was imaged with 7T MRI which resulted in T1 maps and QSM. Aβ plaque load was determined by histopathology. In vivo, 10 Aβ PET-positive AD patients (74.1±6.0a) and 10 Aβ PET-negative HCs (67.1±4.4a) underwent 7T MR examination and QSM maps were analyzed. Severity of cognitive deficits was determined by MMSE. RESULTS: Postmortem, the susceptibility of Aβ plaque-containing GM were higher than those of Aβ plaque-free GM (0.011±0.002 versus - 0.008±0.003 ppm, p CONCLUSION: The postmortem study revealed significant susceptibility differences between the Aβ plaque-containing and Aβ plaque-free GM, whereas in vivo only the QSM values of the globus pallidus differed significantly between AD and HC group. The pallidal QSM values correlated with the severity of cognitive deficits. These findings encourage efforts to optimize the 7T-QSM methodology. |
DOI | 10.3233/JAD-180118 |
Alternate Journal | J. Alzheimers Dis. |
PubMed ID | 29865069 |