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1.
Alzheimers Res Ther ; 15(1): 93, 2023 05 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37170141

BACKGROUND: APP duplication is a rare genetic cause of Alzheimer disease and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). We aimed to evaluate the phenotypes of APP duplications carriers. METHODS: Clinical, radiological, and neuropathological features of 43 APP duplication carriers from 24 French families were retrospectively analyzed, and MRI features and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers were compared to 40 APP-negative CAA controls. RESULTS: Major neurocognitive disorders were found in 90.2% symptomatic APP duplication carriers, with prominent behavioral impairment in 9.7%. Symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhages were reported in 29.2% and seizures in 51.2%. CSF Aß42 levels were abnormal in 18/19 patients and 14/19 patients fulfilled MRI radiological criteria for CAA, while only 5 displayed no hemorrhagic features. We found no correlation between CAA radiological signs and duplication size. Compared to CAA controls, APP duplication carriers showed less disseminated cortical superficial siderosis (0% vs 37.5%, p = 0.004 adjusted for the delay between symptoms onset and MRI). Deep microbleeds were found in two APP duplication carriers. In addition to neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques, CAA was diffuse and severe with thickening of leptomeningeal vessels in all 9 autopsies. Lewy bodies were found in substantia nigra, locus coeruleus, and cortical structures of 2/9 patients, and one presented vascular amyloid deposits in basal ganglia. DISCUSSION: Phenotypes associated with APP duplications were heterogeneous with different clinical presentations including dementia, hemorrhage, and seizure and different radiological presentations, even within families. No apparent correlation with duplication size was found. Amyloid burden was severe and widely extended to cerebral vessels as suggested by hemorrhagic features on MRI and neuropathological data, making APP duplication an interesting model of CAA.


Alzheimer Disease , Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy , Humans , Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Alzheimer Disease/complications , Amyloid/genetics , Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy/genetics , Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/genetics , Cerebral Hemorrhage/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Phenotype , Retrospective Studies
2.
J Neurol ; 269(7): 3625-3635, 2022 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35099587

BACKGROUND: Prognosis of herpetic encephalitis remains severe, with a high proportion of deaths and sequelae. Its treatment is based on acyclovir, but the precise and most effective modalities of this treatment are not established. The objective of this study was to determine them. METHODS: For this, we carried out a descriptive, retrospective, monocentric study, using the current coding database at Marseille University Hospitals. Cohort was intended to be exhaustive for the disease, from January 2000 to June 2019, including patients hospitalized in intensive care and conventional hospitalization sector. Patients (n = 76) included were at least 16 years of age and had a clinical presentation, cerebral Magnetic Resonance Imaging, and/or electroencephalogram abnormalities consistent with herpetic encephalitis confirmed by a positive HSV-PCR in the CSF. Clinical data and treatment, including the doses actually administered to the patient, were compared according to patient's outcome. RESULTS: The mortality rate was 12%, whereas 49% had complete recovery and 39% sequelae impeding independence. Poor outcome was statistically associated with persistence of confusion, aphasia, and impaired consciousness lasting more than 5 days, superinfection, status epilepticus, and length of stay in intensive care unit. A statistical decision tree, constructed using the Classification And Regression Tree model, to prioritize treatment management, showed two main factors that influence the outcome: the patient's weight, and the average daily acyclovir dose actually administered. CONCLUSION: These results suggest to modify acyclovir management in herpetic encephalitis, for low-weight patients (< 79 kg) with a minimum dosage of 2550 mg/day (850 mg/ 8 h), when possible.


Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex , Acyclovir/therapeutic use , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Body Weight , Disease Progression , Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex/diagnostic imaging , Encephalitis, Herpes Simplex/drug therapy , Humans , Retrospective Studies
3.
Physiol Rep ; 9(8): e14711, 2021 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33938163

The extrastriate body area (EBA) is a body-selective focal region located in the lateral occipito-temporal cortex that responds strongly to images of human bodies and body parts in comparison with other classes of stimuli. Whether EBA contributes also to the body recognition of self versus others remains in debate. We investigated whether EBA contributes to self-other distinction and whether there might be a hemispheric-side specificity to that contribution using double-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in right-handed participants. Prior to the TMS experiment, all participants underwent an fMRI localizer task to determine individual EBA location. TMS was then applied over either right EBA, left EBA or vertex, while participants performed an identification task in which images of self or others' right, or left hands were presented. TMS over both EBAs slowed responses, with no identity-specific effect. However, TMS applied over right EBA induced significantly more errors on other's hands than noTMS, TMS over left EBA or over the Vertex, when applied at 100-110 ms after image onset. The last three conditions did not differ, nor was there any difference for self-hands. These findings suggest that EBA participates in self/other discrimination.


Body Image , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Adult , Brain/physiology , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
4.
eNeuro ; 8(4)2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33632816

Generalization of sensorimotor adaptation across limbs, known as interlimb transfer, is a well-demonstrated phenomenon in humans, yet the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. Theoretical models suggest that interlimb transfer is mediated by interhemispheric transfer of information via the corpus callosum. We thus hypothesized that lesions of the corpus callosum, especially to its midbody connecting motor, supplementary motor, and premotor areas of the two cerebral hemispheres, would impair interlimb transfer of sensorimotor adaptation. To test this hypothesis, we recruited three patients: two rare stroke patients with recent, extensive callosal lesions including the midbody and one patient with complete agenesis. A prismatic adaptation paradigm involving unconstrained arm reaching movements was designed to assess interlimb transfer from the prism-exposed dominant arm (DA) to the unexposed non-dominant arm (NDA) for each participant. Baseline results showed that spatial performance of each patient did not significantly differ from controls, for both limbs. Further, each patient adapted to the prismatic perturbation, with no significant difference in error reduction compared with controls. Crucially, interlimb transfer was found in each patient. The absolute magnitude of each patient's transfer did not significantly differ from controls. These findings show that sensorimotor adaptation can transfer across limbs despite extensive lesions or complete absence of the corpus callosum. Therefore, callosal pathways connecting homologous motor, premotor, and supplementary motor areas are not necessary for interlimb transfer of prismatic reach adaptation. Such interlimb transfer could be mediated by transcallosal splenium pathways (connecting parietal, temporal and visual areas), ipsilateral cortico-spinal pathways or subcortical structures such as the cerebellum.


Corpus Callosum , Motor Cortex , Adaptation, Physiological , Functional Laterality , Generalization, Psychological , Humans
5.
Epilepsia ; 62(3): 563-569, 2021 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33476422

Accelerated long-term forgetting (ALF) is a particular form of amnesia mostly encountered in focal epilepsy, particularly in temporal lobe epilepsy. This type of memory loss is characterized by an impairment of long-term consolidation of declarative memory, and its mechanisms remain poorly understood. In particular, the respective contribution of lesion, seizures, interictal epileptic discharges, and sleep is still debated. Here, we provide an overview of the relationships intertwining epilepsy, sleep, and memory consolidation and, based on recent findings from intracranial electroencephalographic recordings, we propose a model of ALF pathophysiology that integrates the differential role of interictal spikes during wakefulness and sleep. This model provides a framework to account for the different timescales at which ALF may occur.


Epilepsies, Partial/complications , Memory Disorders/etiology , Sleep/physiology , Electroencephalography , Humans , Wakefulness/physiology
6.
Cortex ; 132: 92-98, 2020 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32961393

Selectivity is the rule, rather than the exception, in neurodegenerative disease. A retired telephone operator carrying a C9orf72 expansion developed phonagnosia, a selective impairment of voice recognition, contrasting with intact person knowledge and recognition of faces, as a presenting sign of genetically confirmed fronto-temporal dementia. Since the dysfunction in this patient fell into his area of professional expertise, we discuss if overload in voice related neural networks might have caused failure propagating to connected nodes. The interaction with downstream molecular events, triggered by the C9orf72 expansion, may have led to breakdown at the network level, leading to this specific phenotype.


Frontotemporal Dementia , Neurodegenerative Diseases , C9orf72 Protein/genetics , Frontotemporal Dementia/genetics , Humans , Phenotype , Recognition, Psychology , Telephone
7.
Neuroimage ; 222: 117155, 2020 11 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32736002

Dynamic Functional Connectivity (dFC) in the resting state (rs) is considered as a correlate of cognitive processing. Describing dFC as a flow across morphing connectivity configurations, our notion of dFC speed quantifies the rate at which FC networks evolve in time. Here we probe the hypothesis that variations of rs dFC speed and cognitive performance are selectively interrelated within specific functional subnetworks. In particular, we focus on Sleep Deprivation (SD) as a reversible model of cognitive dysfunction. We found that whole-brain level (global) dFC speed significantly slows down after 24h of SD. However, the reduction in global dFC speed does not correlate with variations of cognitive performance in individual tasks, which are subtle and highly heterogeneous. On the contrary, we found strong correlations between performance variations in individual tasks -including Rapid Visual Processing (RVP, assessing sustained visual attention)- and dFC speed quantified at the level of functional sub-networks of interest. Providing a compromise between classic static FC (no time) and global dFC (no space), modular dFC speed analyses allow quantifying a different speed of dFC reconfiguration independently for sub-networks overseeing different tasks. Importantly, we found that RVP performance robustly correlates with the modular dFC speed of a characteristic frontoparietal module.


Attention/physiology , Brain/physiopathology , Cognitive Dysfunction/physiopathology , Connectome , Memory, Short-Term/physiology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Sleep Deprivation/physiopathology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnostic imaging , Cognitive Dysfunction/etiology , Humans , Male , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging , Sleep Deprivation/diagnostic imaging , Time Factors
8.
Data Brief ; 31: 105939, 2020 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32671149

There is a growing interest in understanding functional brain decline with aging. The dataset provides raw anatomical and functional images recorded in a group of 20 young volunteers and in another group of 19 older volunteers during a 10-minute period of resting state followed by four consecutive task-related runs. During each task-related run, the participants were exposed to two types of sensory stimulation: a tactile stimulation consisting in a textured-disk rotation under the palm of their right hand or a muscle proprioceptive stimulation consisting in a mechanical vibration applied to the muscle tendon of their wrist abductor. These two stimulations are known to evoke illusory sensations of hand movement, while the hand remains actually still. Therefore, the dataset is meant to be used to assess age-related functional brain changes during the perception of hand movements based on muscle proprioception or touch individually. It also allows to explore any structural changes or functional resting connectivity alteration with aging. The dataset is a supplement to the research findings in the paper 'Functional brain changes in the elderly for the perception of hand movements: a greater impairment occurs in proprioception than touch published in NeuroImage.

9.
Neuroimage ; 220: 117056, 2020 10 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32562781

Unlike age-related brain changes linked to motor activity, neural alterations related to self-motion perception remain unknown. Using fMRI data, we investigated age-related changes in the central processing of somatosensory information by inducing illusions of right-hand rotations with specific proprioceptive and tactile stimulation. Functional connectivity during resting-state (rs-FC) was also compared between younger and older participants. Results showed common sensorimotor activations in younger and older adults during proprioceptive and tactile illusions, but less deactivation in various right frontal regions and the precuneus were found in the elderly. Older participants exhibited a less-lateralized pattern of activity across the primary sensorimotor cortices (SM1) in the proprioceptive condition only. This alteration of the interhemispheric balance correlated with declining individual performance in illusion velocity perception from a proprioceptive, but not a tactile, origin. By combining task-related data, rs-FC and behavioral performance, this study provided consistent results showing that hand movement perception was altered in the elderly, with a more pronounced deterioration of the proprioceptive system, likely due to the breakdown of inhibitory processes with aging. Nevertheless, older people could benefit from an increase in internetwork connectivity to overcome this kinesthetic decline.


Movement/physiology , Proprioception/physiology , Sensorimotor Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Touch Perception/physiology , Touch/physiology , Adult , Aged , Female , Hand/physiology , Humans , Kinesthesis/physiology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Motion Perception/physiology , Sensorimotor Cortex/physiology , Young Adult
10.
Ann Neurol ; 87(6): 976-987, 2020 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32279329

OBJECTIVE: Non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep is supposed to play a key role in long-term memory consolidation transferring information from hippocampus to neocortex. However, sleep also activates epileptic activities in medial temporal regions. This study investigated whether interictal hippocampal spikes during sleep would impair long-term memory consolidation. METHOD: We prospectively measured visual and verbal memory performance in 20 patients with epilepsy investigated with stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) at immediate, 30-minute, and 1-week delays, and studied the correlations between interictal hippocampal spike frequency during waking and the first cycle of NREM sleep and memory performance, taking into account the number of seizures occurring during the consolidation period and other possible confounding factors, such as age and epilepsy duration. RESULTS: Retention of verbal memory over 1 week was negatively correlated with hippocampal spike frequency during sleep, whereas no significant correlation was found with hippocampal interictal spikes during waking. No significant result was found for visual memory. Regression tree analysis showed that the number of seizures was the first factor that impaired the verbal memory retention between 30 minutes and 1 week. When the number of seizures was below 5, spike frequency during sleep higher than 13 minutes was associated with impaired memory retention over 1 week. INTERPRETATION: Our results show that activation of interictal spikes in the hippocampus during sleep and seizures specifically impair long-term memory consolidation. We hypothesize that hippocampal interictal spikes during sleep interrupt hippocampal-neocortical transfer of information. ANN NEUROL 2020;87:976-987.


Hippocampus/physiopathology , Memory Consolidation , Memory, Long-Term , Seizures/physiopathology , Seizures/psychology , Sleep , Adolescent , Adult , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Prospective Studies , Psychomotor Performance , Sleep, Slow-Wave , Verbal Learning , Young Adult
11.
J Alzheimers Dis ; 74(1): 331-343, 2020.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32039846

Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a neuropathologically heterogeneous entity. The use of cerebrospinal fluid and amyloid biomarkers enables detection of underlying Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. We thus compared clinical, eye movement, and 18FDG-PET imaging characteristics in CBS in two groups of patients divided according to their amyloid biomarkers profile. Fourteen patients presenting with CBS and amyloidosis (CBS-A+) were compared with 16 CBS patients without amyloidosis (CBS-A-). The two groups showed similar motor abnormalities (parkinsonism, dystonia) and global cognitive functions. Unlike CBS-A+ patients who displayed more posterior cortical abnormalities, CBS-A- patients demonstrated more anterior cortical and brain stem dysfunctions on the basis of neuropsychological testing, study of saccade velocities and brain hypometabolism areas on 18FDG-PET. Interestingly, Dopamine Transporter SPECT imaging showed similar levels of dopaminergic degeneration in both groups. These findings confirm common and distinct brain abnormalities between the different neurodegenerative diseases that result in CBS. We demonstrate the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to improve diagnosis in vivo in particular on oculomotor examination.


Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Amyloidosis/diagnostic imaging , Aged , Alzheimer Disease/complications , Amyloidosis/complications , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Brain Stem/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Cognition , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Eye Movements , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Status and Dementia Tests , Middle Aged , Movement Disorders/complications , Movement Disorders/psychology , Positron-Emission Tomography , Psychomotor Performance , Saccades , Syndrome , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
12.
J Alzheimers Dis ; 65(4): 1147-1157, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30124446

BACKGROUND: Neurodegeneration biomarkers are routinely used in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the respective contributions of two neuroimaging biomarkers, structural MRI and 18FDG-PET, in the assessment of neurodegeneration in AD dementia. METHODS: Patients with mild AD dementia diagnosed based on clinical and cerebrospinal fluid criteria and cognitively healthy subjects, from the Marseille cohort ADAge with cognitive, structural MRI and 18FDG-PET assessments, were included. Extent of atrophy on MRI and of hypometabolism on 18FDG-PET were individually evaluated in each patient using a voxel-based analysis on whole-brain approach and compared to healthy subjects. Patients were divided in distinct groups according to their atrophy extent on the one hand and to their hypometabolism extent on the other, then, to their imaging profile combining the extent of the two biomarkers. RESULTS: Fifty-two patients were included. The MMSE score was significantly lower in the "Extensive hypometabolism" group than in the "Limited hypometabolism" group (respectively 19.5/30 versus 23/30). A lower Innotest Amyloid Tau Index was associated with an extensive hypometabolism (p = 0.04). There were more patients with low educational level in the "Extensive atrophy" group, while a higher educational level was more found in the "Limited atrophy" group (p = 0.005). CONCLUSION: 18FDG-PET hypometabolism extent is associated with the pathological processes and clinical severity of AD, while MRI atrophy seems to be influenced by the cognitive reserve. In the context of mild AD dementia, these two biomarkers of neurodegeneration are thus not interchangeable and require to be considered in combination rather than in isolation.


Alzheimer Disease , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Nerve Degeneration/diagnostic imaging , Nerve Degeneration/etiology , Aged , Alzheimer Disease/cerebrospinal fluid , Alzheimer Disease/complications , Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Amyloid beta-Peptides/cerebrospinal fluid , Atrophy/diagnostic imaging , Atrophy/pathology , Female , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Peptide Fragments/cerebrospinal fluid , Positron-Emission Tomography , tau Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid
13.
Hear Res ; 353: 8-16, 2017 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28759745

Hearing loss is known to impact brain function. The aim of this study was to characterize cerebral metabolic Positron Emission Tomography (PET) changes in elderly patients fulfilling criteria for cochlear implant and investigate the impact of hearing loss on functional connectivity. Statistical Parametric Mapping-T-scores-maps comparisons of 18F-FDG-PET of 27 elderly patients fulfilling criteria for cochlear implant for hearing loss (best-aided speech intelligibility lower or equal to 50%) and 27 matched healthy subjects (p < 0.005, corrected for volume extent) were performed. Metabolic connectivity was evaluated through interregional correlation analysis. Patients were found to have decreased metabolism within the right associative auditory cortex, while increased metabolism was found in prefrontal areas, pre- and post-central areas, the cingulum and the left inferior parietal gyrus. The right associative auditory cortex was integrated into a network of increased metabolic connectivity that included pre- and post-central areas, the cingulum, the right inferior parietal gyrus, as well as the striatum on both sides. Metabolic values of the right associative auditory cortex and left inferior parietal gyrus were positively correlated with performance on neuropsychological test scores. These findings provide further insight into the reorganization of the connectome through sensory loss and compensatory mechanisms in elderly patients with severe hearing loss.


Auditory Pathways/diagnostic imaging , Brain Mapping/methods , Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Deafness/diagnostic imaging , Energy Metabolism , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18/administration & dosage , Hearing , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals/administration & dosage , Speech Perception , Adaptation, Physiological , Age of Onset , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aging/metabolism , Aging/psychology , Auditory Pathways/metabolism , Auditory Pathways/physiopathology , Case-Control Studies , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Deafness/metabolism , Deafness/physiopathology , Deafness/psychology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests , Speech Intelligibility
14.
Neurobiol Aging ; 54: 22-30, 2017 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28314160

Neuroimaging biomarkers differ between patients with early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) and late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD). Whether these changes reflect cognitive heterogeneity or differences in disease severity is still unknown. This study aimed at investigating changes in neuroimaging biomarkers, according to the age of onset of the disease, in mild amnestic Alzheimer's disease patients with positive amyloid biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid. Both patient groups were impaired on tasks assessing verbal and visual recognition memory. EOAD patients showed greater executive and linguistic deficits, while LOAD patients showed greater semantic memory impairment. In EOAD and LOAD, hypometabolism involved the bilateral temporoparietal junction and the posterior cingulate cortex. In EOAD, atrophy was widespread, including frontotemporoparietal areas, whereas it was limited to temporal regions in LOAD. Atrophic volumes were greater in EOAD than in LOAD. Hypometabolic volumes were similar in the 2 groups. Greater extent of atrophy in EOAD, despite similar extent of hypometabolism, could reflect different underlying pathophysiological processes, different glucose-based compensatory mechanisms or distinct level of premorbid atrophic lesions.


Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Biomarkers , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neuroimaging , Positron-Emission Tomography , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Alzheimer Disease/metabolism , Amyloid/cerebrospinal fluid , Atrophy , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/metabolism , Brain/pathology , Cognition , Female , Glucose/metabolism , Humans , Male , Memory , Middle Aged , Nerve Degeneration , Severity of Illness Index
15.
PLoS Med ; 14(3): e1002270, 2017 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28350801

BACKGROUND: Amyloid protein precursor (APP), presenilin-1 (PSEN1), and presenilin-2 (PSEN2) mutations cause autosomal dominant forms of early-onset Alzheimer disease (AD-EOAD). Although these genes were identified in the 1990s, variant classification remains a challenge, highlighting the need to colligate mutations from large series. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We report here a novel update (2012-2016) of the genetic screening of the large AD-EOAD series ascertained across 28 French hospitals from 1993 onwards, bringing the total number of families with identified mutations to n = 170. Families were included when at least two first-degree relatives suffered from early-onset Alzheimer disease (EOAD) with an age of onset (AOO) ≤65 y in two generations. Furthermore, we also screened 129 sporadic cases of Alzheimer disease with an AOO below age 51 (44% males, mean AOO = 45 ± 2 y). APP, PSEN1, or PSEN2 mutations were identified in 53 novel AD-EOAD families. Of the 129 sporadic cases screened, 17 carried a PSEN1 mutation and 1 carried an APP duplication (13%). Parental DNA was available for 10 sporadic mutation carriers, allowing us to show that the mutation had occurred de novo in each case. Thirteen mutations (12 in PSEN1 and 1 in PSEN2) identified either in familial or in sporadic cases were previously unreported. Of the 53 mutation carriers with available cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers, 46 (87%) had all three CSF biomarkers-total tau protein (Tau), phospho-tau protein (P-Tau), and amyloid ß (Aß)42-in abnormal ranges. No mutation carrier had the three biomarkers in normal ranges. One limitation of this study is the absence of functional assessment of the possibly and probably pathogenic variants, which should help their classification. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that a nonnegligible fraction of PSEN1 mutations occurs de novo, which is of high importance for genetic counseling, as PSEN1 mutational screening is currently performed in familial cases only. Among the 90 distinct mutations found in the whole sample of families and isolated cases, definite pathogenicity is currently established for only 77%, emphasizing the need to pursue the effort to classify variants.


Alzheimer Disease/diagnosis , Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Amyloid beta-Protein Precursor/genetics , Presenilin-1/genetics , Presenilin-2/genetics , Adult , Age of Onset , Female , France , Genetic Testing , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mutation
16.
Alzheimers Dement ; 13(8): 870-884, 2017 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28259709

INTRODUCTION: A classification framework for posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) is proposed to improve the uniformity of definition of the syndrome in a variety of research settings. METHODS: Consensus statements about PCA were developed through a detailed literature review, the formation of an international multidisciplinary working party which convened on four occasions, and a Web-based quantitative survey regarding symptom frequency and the conceptualization of PCA. RESULTS: A three-level classification framework for PCA is described comprising both syndrome- and disease-level descriptions. Classification level 1 (PCA) defines the core clinical, cognitive, and neuroimaging features and exclusion criteria of the clinico-radiological syndrome. Classification level 2 (PCA-pure, PCA-plus) establishes whether, in addition to the core PCA syndrome, the core features of any other neurodegenerative syndromes are present. Classification level 3 (PCA attributable to AD [PCA-AD], Lewy body disease [PCA-LBD], corticobasal degeneration [PCA-CBD], prion disease [PCA-prion]) provides a more formal determination of the underlying cause of the PCA syndrome, based on available pathophysiological biomarker evidence. The issue of additional syndrome-level descriptors is discussed in relation to the challenges of defining stages of syndrome severity and characterizing phenotypic heterogeneity within the PCA spectrum. DISCUSSION: There was strong agreement regarding the definition of the core clinico-radiological syndrome, meaning that the current consensus statement should be regarded as a refinement, development, and extension of previous single-center PCA criteria rather than any wholesale alteration or redescription of the syndrome. The framework and terminology may facilitate the interpretation of research data across studies, be applicable across a broad range of research scenarios (e.g., behavioral interventions, pharmacological trials), and provide a foundation for future collaborative work.


Brain Diseases/classification , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Brain Diseases/physiopathology , Brain Diseases/psychology , Humans
17.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 10: 307, 2016.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27378896

Diagonistic dyspraxia (DD) is by far the most spectacular manifestation reported by sufferers of acute corpus callosum (CC) injury (so-called "split-brain"). In this form of alien hand syndrome, one hand acts at cross purposes with the other "against the patient's will". Although recent models view DD as a disorder of motor control, there is still little information regarding its neural underpinnings, due to widespread connectivity changes produced by CC insult, and the obstacle that non-volitional movements represent for task-based functional neuroimaging studies. Here, we studied patient AM, the first report of DD in patient with complete developmental CC agenesis. This unique case also offers the opportunity to study the resting-state connectomics of DD in the absence of diffuse changes subsequent to CC injury or surgery. AM developed DD following status epilepticus (SE) which resolved over a 2-year period. Whole brain functional connectivity (FC) was compared (Crawford-Howell [CH]) to 16 controls during the period of acute DD symptoms (Time 1) and after remission (Time 2). Whole brain graph theoretical models were also constructed and topological efficiency examined. At Time 1, disrupted FC was observed in inter-hemispheric and intra-hemispheric right edges, involving frontal superior and midline structures. Graph analysis indicated disruption of the efficiency of salience and right frontoparietal (FP) networks. At Time 2, after remission of diagnostic dyspraxia symptoms, FC and salience network changes had resolved. In sum, longitudinal analysis of connectivity in AM indicates that DD behaviors could result from disruption of systems that support the experience and control of volitional movements and the ability to generate appropriate behavioral responses to salient stimuli. This also raises the possibility that changes to large-scale functional architecture revealed by resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) (rs-fMRI) may provide relevant information on the evolution of behavioral syndromes in addition to that provided by structural and task-based functional imaging.

18.
Cortex ; 74: 217-32, 2016 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26694580

The goal of this study was to investigate the specific patterns of memory breakdown in patients suffering from early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) and late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD). Twenty EOAD patients, twenty LOAD patients, twenty matched younger controls, and twenty matched older controls participated in this study. All participants underwent a detailed neuropsychological assessment, an MRI scan, an FDG-PET scan, and AD patients had biomarkers as supporting evidence of both amyloïdopathy and neuronal injury. Results of the neuropsychological assessment showed that both EOAD and LOAD groups were impaired in the domains of memory, executive functions, language, praxis, and visuoconstructional abilities, when compared to their respective control groups. EOAD and LOAD groups, however, showed distinct patterns of memory impairment. Even though both groups were similarly affected on measures of episodic, short term and working memory, in contrast semantic memory was significantly more impaired in LOAD than in EOAD patients. The EOAD group was not more affected than the LOAD group in any memory domain. EOAD patients, however, showed significantly poorer performance in other cognitive domains including executive functions and visuoconstructional abilities. A more detailed analysis of the pattern of semantic memory performance among patient groups revealed that the LOAD was more profoundly impaired, in tasks of both spontaneous recall and semantic recognition. Voxel-Based Morphometry (VBM) analyses showed that impaired semantic performance in patients was associated with reduced gray matter volume in the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) region, while PET-FDG analyses revealed that poorer semantic performance was associated with greater hypometabolism in the left temporoparietal region, both areas reflecting key regions of the semantic network. Results of this study indicate that EOAD and LOAD patients present with distinct patterns of memory impairment, and that a genuine semantic impairment may represent one of the clinical hallmarks of LOAD.


Alzheimer Disease/psychology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Language , Memory Disorders/psychology , Memory/physiology , Age Factors , Age of Onset , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Brain/pathology , Executive Function/physiology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Memory Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Memory Disorders/pathology , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests
19.
Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging ; 42(10): 1512-21, 2015 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25900275

PURPOSE: The ε4 allele of the apolipoprotein E (APO-E4) gene, a genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD), also modulates brain metabolism and function in healthy subjects. The aim of the present study was to explore cerebral metabolism using FDG PET in healthy APO-E4 carriers by comparing cognitively normal APO-E4 carriers to noncarriers and to assess if patterns of metabolism are correlated with performance on cognitive tasks. Moreover, metabolic connectivity patterns were established in order to assess if the organization of neural networks is influenced by genetic factors. METHODS: Whole-brain PET statistical analysis was performed at voxel-level using SPM8 with a threshold of p < 0.005, corrected for volume, with age, gender and level of education as nuisance variables. Significant hypometabolism between APO-E4 carriers (n = 11) and noncarriers (n = 30) was first determined. Mean metabolic values with clinical/neuropsychological data were extracted at the individual level, and correlations were searched using Spearman's rank test in the whole group. To evaluate metabolic connectivity from metabolic cluster(s) previously identified in the intergroup comparison, voxel-wise interregional correlation analysis (IRCA) was performed between groups of subjects. RESULTS: APO-E4 carriers had reduced metabolism within the left anterior medial temporal lobe (MTL), where neuropathological changes first appear in AD, including the entorhinal and perirhinal cortices. A correlation between metabolism in this area and performance on the DMS48 (delayed matching to sample-48 items) was found, in line with converging evidence involving the perirhinal cortex in object-based memory. Finally, a voxel-wise IRCA revealed stronger metabolic connectivity of the MTL cluster with neocortical frontoparietal regions in carriers than in noncarriers, suggesting compensatory metabolic networks. CONCLUSION: Exploring cerebral metabolism using FDG PET can contribute to a better understanding of the influence of genetic factors on cerebral metabolism at both the local and network levels leading to phenotypical variations of the healthy brain and selective vulnerability.


Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Apolipoprotein E4/genetics , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18/pharmacokinetics , Memory/physiology , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Adult , Aged , Cerebral Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Heterozygote , Humans , Male , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/physiology , Middle Aged , Radiopharmaceuticals/pharmacokinetics , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
20.
Front Psychol ; 6: 61, 2015.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25698995

This neuroimaging (functional magnetic resonance imaging) study investigated neural correlates of strategy selection. Young adults performed an arithmetic task in two different conditions. In both conditions, participants had to provide estimates of two-digit multiplication problems like 54 × 78. In the choice condition, participants had to select the better of two available rounding strategies, rounding-up (RU) strategy (i.e., doing 60 × 80 = 4,800) or rounding-down (RD) strategy (i.e., doing 50 × 70 = 3,500 to estimate product of 54 × 78). In the no-choice condition, participants did not have to select strategy on each problem but were told which strategy to use; they executed RU and RD strategies each on a series of problems. Participants also had a control task (i.e., providing correct products of multiplication problems like 40 × 50). Brain activations and performance were analyzed as a function of these conditions. Participants were able to frequently choose the better strategy in the choice condition; they were also slower when they executed the difficult RU than the easier RD. Neuroimaging data showed greater brain activations in right anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), and angular gyrus (ANG), when selecting (relative to executing) the better strategy on each problem. Moreover, RU was associated with more parietal cortex activation than RD. These results suggest an important role of fronto-parietal network in strategy selection and have important implications for our further understanding and modeling cognitive processes underlying strategy selection.

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