Author:
BIGLER ERIN D.,TATE DAVID F.,MILLER MICHAEL J.,RICE SARA A.,HESSEL CORY D.,EARL HEATH D.,TSCHANZ JOANN T.,PLASSMAN BRENDA,WELSH-BOHMER KATHLEEN A.
Abstract
We examined asymmetry of hippocampal volume as well as other
temporal lobe structures (temporal lobe, temporal horn of the
lateral ventricular system, parahippocampal and fusiform gyri)
in 194 subjects from the Cache County, Utah study, with varying
disorders [85 with Alzheimer's disease (AD), 59 with
some cognitive or neuropsychiatric disorder—referenced
as a Mixed Neuropsychiatric group, 30 with mild ambiguous/mild
cognitive impairment (MA/MCI) and 20 controls] and APOE
genotypes. Asymmetry was determined by subtracting left-side
volume from the right corrected by total intracranial volume.
No significant asymmetry was observed to be associated with
presence of the ε4 allele. Since the AD-ε4 allele risk
effect may be expressed early in the course of the disorder,
we also examined asymmetry indices in AD, MA/MCI and Mixed
Neuropsychiatric subjects early in the course of their disorder
(2 years or less) to those with longer duration illness (greater
than 2 years). We observed a leftward asymmetry (i.e., left
side larger) regardless of APOE genotype in hippocampal volume
where both AD and MCI subjects demonstrated a leftward shift
in hippocampal size when length of disease (LOD) was less but
not more than 2 years. Leftward asymmetry was not associated
with LOD in the Mixed Neuropsychiatric group. These findings
do not support an association between ε4 and hippocampal
asymmetry in dementia. We also examined whether asymmetry
influenced neuropsychological performance, but minimal effects
were observed. Where significance or strong trends were observed,
better neuropsychological performance was associated with larger
parenchymal volume of temporal lobe structures. These findings
were interpreted as representing cognitive reserve effects where
larger volume was protective against impairment. The role of
asymmetry research in understanding neuropsychological performance
in dementia is discussed. (JINS, 2002, 8,
925–933.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
35 articles.
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