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Clinical Conference Neural basis for verb processing in Alzheimer's disease: an fMRI study. 2003
Grossman M, Koenig P, DeVita C, Glosser G, Moore P, Gee J, Detre J, Alsop D. · Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104-4283, USA. · Neuropsychology. · Pubmed #14599278 No free full text.
Abstract: Patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD) have difficulty understanding verbs. To investigate the neural basis for this deficit, the authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine patterns of neural activation during verb processing in 11 AD patients compared with 16 healthy seniors. Subjects judged the pleasantness of verbs, including MOTION verbs and COGNITION verbs. Healthy seniors and AD patients both activated posterolateral temporal and inferior frontal regions during judgments of verbs. These activations were relatively reduced and somewhat changed in their anatomic distribution in AD patients compared with healthy seniors, particularly for the subcategory of MOTION verbs, but AD patients showed minimal activation in association with COGNITION verbs. These findings imply that poor performance with verbs in AD is due in part to altered activation of the large-scale neural network that supports verb processing.
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Article Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia exhibit distinct atrophy-behavior correlates: a computer-assisted imaging study. 2003
Gee J, Ding L, Xie Z, Lin M, DeVita C, Grossman M. · Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, 3600 Market Street, Suite 370, Philadelphia, PA 19104-2644, USA. · Acad Radiol. · Pubmed #14697007 No free full text.
Abstract: RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that distinct patterns of gray matter atrophy are responsible for unique interruptions of the naming process in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) was performed to characterize at the voxel level the neuroanatomic changes that occur in AD and FTD based on high-resolution T1-weighted three-dimensional (3D) spoiled-gradient echo images of patients (AD, n = 12; FTD, n = 29) and healthy control subjects (n = 12). The cortical atrophy measurements were correlated with performance on behavioral measures of naming and related processes to identify brain regions that may contribute to this language function. RESULTS: Both AD and FTD have significant naming difficulty, and this difficulty in naming correlates with a measure of lexical retrieval in both patient groups as well. However, only FTD patients showed a correlation with semantic memory. Areas of cortical atrophy common to AD and FTD were found in the anterior temporal, posterolateral temporal, and dorsolateral prefrontal regions of the left hemisphere. Correlation with naming in both AD and FTD was seen in the left anterior temporal cortex, suggesting that this area may play a role in the lexical retrieval component of naming. We also observed several unique areas of cortical atrophy in temporal and frontal cortices of these patients. Right anterior temporal and left posterolateral temporal regions of atrophy correlated with naming difficulty in FTD, suggesting that these areas may contribute to the semantic memory component of naming. Cortical areas correlating with naming that are not atrophic may represent regions that play an optional role in naming. CONCLUSION: VBM provides an important first step in analyzing brain-behavior relations in vivo in patients with neurodegenerative diseases. More refined analyses of brain morphology via high-dimensional normalization methods that are capable of modeling local as well as global variability in neuroanatomical structure promise to be even more informative.
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Article Neural basis for semantic memory difficulty in Alzheimer's disease: an fMRI study. free! 2003
Grossman M, Koenig P, Glosser G, DeVita C, Moore P, Rhee J, Detre J, Alsop D, Gee J, Anonymous00079. · Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-4283, USA. · Brain. · Pubmed #12538399 links to free full text
Abstract: Patients with probable Alzheimer's disease are thought to have a semantic memory deficit. We used functional MRI to evaluate the neural basis for impaired semantic memory for ANIMALS and IMPLEMENTS in 11 patients with Alzheimer's disease and 16 healthy seniors. For both categories of knowledge, Alzheimer's disease patients show reduced activation in the left posterolateral temporal-inferior parietal cortex compared with healthy seniors. Activation changes in this heteromodal association region may be related to an impairment of the category-neutral semantic processes involved in integrating feature knowledge that is represented in modality-specific association cortices. We also found increased activation of an area of the left temporal cortex for both categories of knowledge in Alzheimer's disease that was not activated in healthy seniors. Category-specific changes were also seen in Alzheimer's disease compared with healthy seniors that may be related to the neural representation of category-specific feature knowledge represented in semantic memory. For ANIMALS, the left ventral temporal cortex was activated in Alzheimer's disease in an anatomical distribution that was posterior to the left ventral recruitment for this category in healthy seniors. For IMPLEMENTS, frontal-striatal regions were activated in Alzheimer's disease in a manner that was displaced from the locus of recruitment for this category in healthy seniors. Our findings are consistent with a two-component model of semantic memory involving category-neutral processes operating on category- specific knowledge, and both components appear to be compromised in Alzheimer's disease. Components of the large-scale neural network underlying semantic memory may modify themselves to maintain performance in the face of a neurodegenerative disease.
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