• J Neuroimaging · Jan 2019

    Patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment May be Stratified by Advanced Diffusion Metrics and Neurocognitive Testing.

    • Jason W Allen, Milad Yazdani, Jian Kang, Marcus J Magnussen, Deqiang Qiu, and William Hu.
    • Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA.
    • J Neuroimaging. 2019 Jan 1; 29 (1): 79-84.

    Background And PurposeMild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a prevalent disorder, with a subset of patients progressing to dementia each year. Although MCI may be subdivided into amnestic or vascular types as well as into single or multiple cognitive domain involvement, most prior studies using advanced diffusion imaging have not accounted for these categories. The purpose of the current study was to determine if the pattern of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) metrics in patients with amnestic MCI (aMCI) correlate to specific cognitive domain impairments.MethodsNineteen consecutive patients with aMCI referred for brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were included. All subjects underwent neurocognitive testing. A z-score was calculated for each domain and a composite of all four domains. Brain MRI included standard structural imaging and diffusion imaging. Volumetric, DTI, and DKI metrics were calculated and statistical analysis was performed with adjustments for multiple measures and comparisons.ResultsStatistically significant correlations between diffusion metrics and cognitive z-scores were detected: visuospatial-visuoconstructional z-scores only correlated with alterations in the corpus callosum splenium, executive functioning z-scores with the corpus callosum genu, memory testing z-scores with the left hippocampus, and composite z-scores with the anterior centrum semiovale.ConclusionNeuroimaging studies of patients with aMCI to date have assumed a population with homogeneous cognitive impairment. Our results demonstrate selective patterns of regional diffusion metric alterations correlate to specific cognitive domain impairments. Future studies should account for this heterogeneity, and this may also be useful for prognostication.© 2018 by the American Society of Neuroimaging.

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