Luc J.P. Defebvre, Valérie
Leduc, Alain Duhamel, Pascal Lecouffe, Florence Pasquier,
Chantale Lamy-Lhullier, Marc Steinling and Alain Destée
Departments of Neurology A, Medical Informatics, Nuclear
Medicine and Memory Center, Lille, France
The aim of this study was to compare the regional
cerebral blood flow measurements studied by SPECT in dementia
with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) to determine
the contribution of SPECT to the differential diagnosis of
these two diseases.
Methods: SPECT analysis with 99mTc-hexamethyl
propyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) was performed in 20 patients
with probable DLB, 20 patients with probable AD and 20 patients
with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD). Ten pairs of regions
of interest were analyzed. Tracer uptake was expressed as
a corticocerebellar activity ratio.
Results: Compared with IPD, in the DLB
group there was a global decrease of HMPAO uptake in cortical
regions of interest except in the posterior frontal and occipital
regions; in the AD group there was limited left temporal and
parietal hypoperfusion. In the DLB group, frontal HMPAO uptake
was significantly lower than in the AD group. Two predictive
scores were established by a factorial discriminant analysis
from six left cortical indices (medial frontal, lateral frontal,
posterior frontal, temporoparietal, parietal and parietooccipital)
and the Mini-Mental State Examination, which correctly classified
53 of 60 patients (88%) (DLB, 18 of 20; AD, 16 of 20; IPD,
19 of 20).
Conclusion: These findings indicate the
presence of diffuse cortical abnormalities in DLB and suggest
that SPECT may be useful in discriminating in vivo DLB from
AD, revealing mainly frontal hypoperfusion in the former group.
We estimate that SPECT study increases the possibility of
separating DLB and AD because both disorders share different
patterns of cerebral blood flow abnormality.
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