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Neurological Applications
Contents:
Neurological Applications
Dementia
Work-Up
Disease Background. Dementia is
defined as loss of memory and at least one other area of complex
behavior sufficient to interfere with day-to-day function. The
magnitude of the problem is increasing, and it is estimated that 5%
of the population older than 65 y and up to 25% of the population
older than 80 y has some form of dementia. Causes of dementia include
degenerative changes (e.g., Alzheimer´s disease, Pick´s disease,
Parkinson´s disease, Huntington´s disease), vascular insufficiency,
trauma, endocrine changes, and other causes. Metabolic changes in the
brain have been shown to precede structural changes by at least 5 y.
Treatment for the degenerative forms of dementia, such as
Alzheimer´s, is improving with the use of cholinesterase inhibitors
and treatment options continue to grow. The diagnosis of early
Alzheimer´s disease and its differential diagnosis from other organic
dementias or the benign effects of aging remain clinically difficult
today. PET with FDG has been shown to provide an accurate and
positive differential diagnosis of Alzheimer´s and of other
forms of organic dementias. In some ways, the diagnosis of
dementia is similar to that for cancer in the separation of benign
from malignant disease. In the case of dementia, it is the
separation of benign from organic degenerative disease.
Case Example. A 67-y-old man
presented with a 3-y history of progressive loss of memory and
day-to-day function and a clinical diagnosis of possible Alzheimer´s.
A brain MR image showed no anatomic indications of disease. An FDG
PET scan was ordered to evaluate for possible Alzheimer´s disease.
Shown in the left column in Figure
21 is a normal FDG PET scan from a 64-y-old man. In the right
column is the FDG PET scan from the patient in this case. Two
representative slices are shown from each individual. The right
column clearly shows low FDG metabolism in the back portion of the
brain (arrows) in the parietal and temporal regions. This
hypometabolism pattern is consistent with Alzheimer´s disease.
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FIGURE 21. Case example, dementia.
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Why Did FDG PET Help? FDG PET established with
a high degree of accuracy that the patient´s symptoms were the result
of Alzheimer´s disease and not other causes of dementia. The
diagnosis of Alzheimer´s disease was confirmed 6 y later at
autopsy.
Key Management Issues.
Early diagnosis of dementia versus benign memory loss
Differential diagnosis of dementia from frontotemporal
disease, diffuse Lewy bodies, or cerebrovascular
diseases
Differentiation from pseudodementia/depression (This is a
dementia-like state that is caused by depression and not
Alzheimer´s disease.)
Summary of Evidence for FDG PET in Dementia
Work-Up. Primary neurodegeneration is the most common process
underlying dementia, and Alzheimer´s disease alone accounts for
approximately two-thirds of cases. Regional cerebral metabolic
patterns reflect pathophysiologic changes in brain that will lead to
Alzheimer´s disease, even before they give rise to symptoms. In
addition to the diagnostic value FDG PET may have in evaluation of
dementia, it can also serve as a prognostic tool to determine the
likelihood of deterioration of mental status during the years after
scanning, thereby facilitating planning by the patient and family
members. Although results have varied, depending in part on the
severity and diagnostic mix of patients, nearly all studies
designed to assess the accuracy of FDG PET in the diagnosis of
dementia have found sensitivity for Alzheimer´s disease to be
>90%, with specificity typically approximating 75% (range,
67% - 97%). Meeting the challenge of accurately identifying minimally
affected patients to allow them to reap the greatest potential
therapeutic benefits requires making the diagnosis with a high degree
of sensitivity and overall accuracy at the earliest possible
stage of disease. The consistently high sensitivity of FDG PET
in patients with even mild impairment makes it well suited for
assisting with that task (Table
22).
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table:
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TABLE 22 FDG PET in Dementia Work-Up:
Results of Literature Search
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Seizure Work-Up
Disease Background. Epilepsy is a
common condition, with a prevalence in the population of about 1 in
200 people. Several abnormalities within the brain can lead to
abnormal "synchronous firing" of neurons, causing a seizure.
Depending on which part of the brain is epileptogenic, seizures will
have different outward appearances. In a grand mal seizure, all
extremities move as a result of abnormal neuronal firing, which
spreads within the brain to cause a diffuse motor seizure. Imaging of
all types helps to locate abnormalities within the brain, and, when
coupled with electroencephalography (EEG, scalp electrical signal
monitoring), can help to manage epilepsy patients. Many patients can
be controlled well on medications. Patients who have seizures despite
having tried several medications are referred to as patients with
intractable seizures. In these patients, identifying the source of
the seizure within the brain often can lead to surgery that can stop
or reduce the seizures. Imaging, including FDG PET, can play an
important role in determining whether a patient is a candidate to be
operated on for seizure control. The alternative (invasive electronic
monitoring) requires putting electrodes into the brain parenchyma or
meninges, with attending morbidity and mortality.
Case Example. An 11-y-old boy,
diagnosed with epilepsy at age 7, had been treated with medications
for 4 y. During the last year, he had continued to have seizures,
even with a change in antiseizure medications. An FDG PET scan was
ordered to evaluate for the possible source of the seizure. MRI
showed no structural abnormality. The FDG PET scan (Fig.
22) showed moderate-to-severe hypometabolism (lower than normal
glucose utilization) in the right parietal, posterior, frontal,
occipital, and temporal lobes (arrows) in the interictal period
(i.e., between seizures).
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FIGURE 22. Case example, seizure. |
Why Did FDG PET Help? PET showed eleptogenic
tissue in the localized brain. Surgery was performed to resect the
dysfunctional tissue. The child, after surgery, was seizure
free.
Key Management Issues.
Diagnosis of partial epilepsy (MRI negative)
Localization of seizure focus
Prediction of surgical outcome (prognosis)
Summary of Evidence for FDG PET in Seizure
Work-Up. In patients who have medically intractable epilepsy,
neurosurgery to resect epileptogenic foci can decrease or eliminate
seizure episodes and reduce neurologic impairment resulting from
recurrent seizures and/or high doses of anticonvulsants. Patients
with complex partial seizures, particularly those who have EEG
evidence of a temporal lobe focus but inconclusive findings on MRI,
often are referred for functional brain imaging to assess
interictal metabolism. PET with FDG can identify epileptogenic zones
through localization of hypometabolic brain tissue interictally.
Interictal FDG PET has been demonstrated to be as useful for
presurgical planning in most patients with temporal lobe epilepsy as
the more logistically cumbersome ictal SPECT or more invasive
EEG monitoring with depth electrodes. Patients with unilateral
foci of hypometabolism identified by PET have been found in
numerous studies to have a high likelihood of benefiting from
neurosurgery, regardless of whether invasive electrode monitoring is
also undertaken. Patients can thus be saved risks and costs
otherwise incurred with invasive monitoring. Further study is needed
to define more specifically the role of depth electrodes and
surgical therapy in patients with findings of bilateral
hypometabolism (Table
23).
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Cardiac Applications
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