Mega MS, Lee L, Dinov ID, Mishkin F, Toga AW, Cummings JL.
"Cerebral correlates of psychotic symptoms in Alzheimer's Disease",
J. Neurol., Neurosurg. and Psychiatry, (69), 167-171, 2000.
Abstract
Background:
Psychotic symptoms are produced by distributed neuronal dysfunction.
Abnormalities of reality testing and false inference implicate frontal lobe
abnormalities.
Objectives: To identify the functional imaging
profile of patients with Alzheimer's
disease manifesting psychotic symptoms
as measured by single photon emission
computed tomography (SPECT).
Methods: Twenty patients with
Alzheimer's disease who had SPECT and
clinical evaluations were divided into two
equal groups with similar mini mental
status examination (MMSE), age, sex, and
the range of behaviours documented by
the neuropsychiatric inventory (NPI), except
delusions and hallucinations. SPECT
studies, registered to a probabilistic anatomical
atlas, were normalised across the
combined group mean intensity level, and
subjected to a voxel by voxel subtraction
of the nonpsychotic minus psychotic
groups. Subvolume thresholding (SVT)
corrected random lobar noise to produce
a three dimensional functional significance
map.
Results: The significance map showed
lower regional perfusion in the right and
left dorsolateral frontal, left anterior cingulate,
and left ventral striatal regions
along with the left pulvinar and dorsolateral
parietal cortex, in the psychotic versus
non-psychotic group.
Conclusion: Patients with Alzheimer's
disease who manifest psychosis may have
disproportionate dysfunction of frontal
lobes and related subcortical and parietal
structures.
\Ivo D. Dinov,
Ph.D., Lab of Neuro Imaging, UCLA School of Medicine/