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11C-PIB binding is increased in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related hemorrhage.

Authors :
Phan T.G.
Saunder T.
Ackerman U.
Tochon-Danguy H.
Churilov L.
Rowe C.C.
Ly J.V.
Donnan G.A.
Villemagne V.L.
Zavala J.A.
Ma H.
O'Keefe G.
Gong S.J.
Gunawan R.M.
Phan T.G.
Saunder T.
Ackerman U.
Tochon-Danguy H.
Churilov L.
Rowe C.C.
Ly J.V.
Donnan G.A.
Villemagne V.L.
Zavala J.A.
Ma H.
O'Keefe G.
Gong S.J.
Gunawan R.M.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background: The in vivo diagnosis of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is inferred from clinical and structural imaging features. C-Pittsburgh compound B (PIB) is a PET ligand that binds to beta-amyloid in extracellular plaques and vessel walls. We hypothesized that patients with a clinical diagnosis of CAA-related hemorrhage (CAAH) have increased C-PIB uptake and that the pattern differs from Alzheimer disease (AD). Methodology: Patients with CAAH based on established clinical criteria were studied using C-PIB PET and were compared with age-matched controls and patients with AD. Distribution volume ratio (DVR) parametric maps were created using the cerebellar cortex as a reference region. Result(s): Twelve patients with CAAH of mean age 73.9 (range 58-93) years were compared with 22 normal controls and 13 patients with AD of mean age 71.8 (59-83) and 73.8 (56-90) years, respectively. CAAH PIB median DVR binding was higher in cortical regions (1.69, interquartile range 1.44-1.97) compared with controls (1.32, 1.21-1.44, p = 0.002) but lower than AD (2.04, 1.93-2.26, p = 0.004). The occipital-global uptake ratio was lower among patients with AD than among patients with CAAH (p = 0.008), and the frontal-global uptake ratio was higher (p = 0.012). Conclusion(s): C-Pittsburgh compound B (PIB) binding is moderately increased in most patients with probable cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)-related intracerebral hemorrhage. The distribution may differ from that seen in Alzheimer disease. C-PIB PET may assist in the in vivo diagnosis of CAA and serve as a surrogate marker for future therapeutic studies. © 2010 by AAN Enterprises, Inc.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1305128904
Document Type :
Electronic Resource