Dementie te voorspellen met hersenscan.*
Jaren voordat de eerste symptomen zich
openbaren, kan dementie in de hersenen zichtbaar worden gemaakt. Rotterdamse
onderzoekers stellen dat in de dinsdag verschenen editie van het medische
tijdschrift Archives of General Psychiatry.
De onderzoekers constateren dat ouderen met een kleine hippocampus of amygdala
een grotere kans lopen dement te worden. De hippocampus en de amygdala zijn
hersengebieden bovenaan de hersenstam die bij ouderen met de ziekte van
Alzheimer altijd sterk verkleind zijn.
Uit het onderzoek van het Erasmus Medisch Centrum blijkt nu dat bij patiënten
deze hersendelen jaren voordat zij de eerste symptomen van dementie vertonen
kleiner zijn. De wetenschappers baseren zich op onderzoek onder 511
zestigplussers, die tien jaar geleden hun eerste hersenscan kregen.
Reduced
Brain Volume May Predict Dementia In Healthy Elderly People
Reduced volume, or atrophy, in parts
of the brain known as the amygdala and hippocampus may predict which cognitively
healthy elderly people will develop dementia over a six-year period, according
to a study in the January issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
New strategies may be able to prevent or delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease
(AD), the most common cause of dementia among older adults, according to
background information in the article. Accurate methods of identifying which
people are at high risk for dementia in old age would help physicians determine
who could benefit from these interventions. There is evidence that adults with
AD and mild cognitive impairment, a less severe condition that is considered a
risk factor for AD, have reduced hippocampal and amygdalar volumes. However,
previous research has not addressed whether measuring atrophy using magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) can predict the onset of AD at an earlier stage, before
cognitive symptoms appear.
Tom den Heijer, M.D., Ph.D., of the Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the
Netherlands, and colleagues used MRI to assess the brain volumes of 511
dementia-free elderly people who were part of the Rotterdam Study, a large
population-based cohort study that began in 1990. They screened the participants
for dementia at initial visits in 1995 and 1996 and then in follow-up visits
between 1997 and 2003, during which they asked about memory problems and
performed extensive neuropsychological testing. The authors also monitored the
medical records of all participants. During the follow-up, 35 participants
developed dementia and 26 were diagnosed with AD.
People with severe amygdalar or hippocampal atrophy had the highest risk of
developing dementia or AD over the course of the study, which followed
participants for an average period of six years. "Concerning the extent of
atrophy, we found in those destined to develop dementia volume reductions
between 17 percent and 5 percent, depending on how long before the diagnosis of
dementia the MRI was conducted," the authors report. "In persons with
mild to moderate Alzheimer disease, volume reductions compared with healthy
elderly persons are between 25 percent and 40 percent, suggesting that atrophy
rates accelerate in patients with Alzheimer disease."
"Our study suggests that structural brain imaging can help identify people
at high risk for developing dementia, even before they have any memory
complaints or measurable cognitive impairment," they write. "However,
we must bear in mind that most people with atrophy did not develop dementia,
even after six years. Further prospective population studies are therefore
required to find additional biomarkers, including other brain imaging
parameters, that alone or in combination with clinical and genetic
characteristics can help separate those who are at risk for developing dementia
from those who are not."
(Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2006;63:57-62)
Editor's Note: This research was financially supported by the Netherlands
Organisation for Scientific Research and the Health Research and Development
Council, The Hague, the Netherlands.
Monique M. B. Breteler
m.breteler@erasmusmc.nl
JAMA and Archives Journals
www.jamamedia.org
(
Januari 2006)