1. Probable Alzheimer disease: diagnosis with proton MR spectroscopy.
- Author
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Shonk TK, Moats RA, Gifford P, Michaelis T, Mandigo JC, Izumi J, and Ross BD
- Subjects
- Aged, Aspartic Acid analogs & derivatives, Aspartic Acid metabolism, Brain Diseases, Metabolic diagnosis, Creatine metabolism, Dementia diagnosis, Diagnosis, Differential, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Inositol metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Alzheimer Disease diagnosis, Brain metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
- Abstract
Purpose: To distinguish probable Alzheimer disease (AD) from other dementias (ODs) and normality in the elderly., Materials and Methods: A double-blind trial of proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy was performed, principally in gray matter, in the occipital cortex of 114 patients with dementia (AD [n = 65], OD [n = 39], or frontal lobe dementia [FLD] [n = 10]), 98 patients without dementia, and 32 healthy control subjects., Results: Reduced levels of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) (P < .0005) and increased levels of myo-inositol (MI) (P < .0005) characterize AD. Patients with OD had significantly reduced levels of NAA (P < .01) but normal levels of MI (P [vs AD] < .0005). When MI/NAA was used, AD was distinguished from normality with 83% sensitivity and 98% specificity. When MI/creatine was used, OD was distinguished from AD and FLD with a negative predictive rate of 80%, sensitivity of 82%, and specificity of 64%., Conclusion: Hydrogen-1 MR spectroscopy enables identification of mild to moderate AD with a specificity and sensitivity that suggest clinical utility.
- Published
- 1995
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