Cerebral glucose metabolic patterns in Alzheimer's disease.
Effect of gender and age at dementia onset
Source: Arch Gen Psychiatry
1989 Jun;46(6):527-532.
Author: Small GW;Kuhl DE;Riege WH;Fujikawa DG;Ashford JW;Metter
EJ;Mazziotta JC PubMed ID: 2730277
Abstract:
No previous study of Alzheimer's disease has, to our knowledge,
assessed the effect of both age at dementia onset and gender on cerebral
glucose metabolic patterns. To this end, we used positron emission
tomography (fludeoxyglucose F 18 method) to study 24 patients with
clinical diagnoses of probable Alzheimer's disease. Comparisons of the
13 patients with early-onset dementia (less than 65 years of age) with
the 11 patients with late-onset dementia (greater than 65 years of age)
revealed significantly lower left parietal metabolic ratios (left
posterior parietal region divided by the hemispheric average) in the
early-onset group. The metabolic ratio of posterior parietal cortex
divided by the relatively disease-stable average of caudate and thalamus
also separated patients with early-onset dementia from those with
late-onset dementia, but not men from women. Further comparisons between
sexes showed that, in all brain regions studied, the 9 postmenopausal
women had higher nonweighted mean metabolic rates than the 15 men from
the same age group, with hemispheric sex differences of 9% on the right
and 7% on the left. These results demonstrate decreased parietal ratios
in early-onset dementia of Alzheimer's disease, independent of a gender
effect