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Diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies: can 123 I-IMP and 123 I-MIBG scintigraphy yield new core features?

Since the clinical symptoms of different types of dementia frequently overlap, especially in the earlier stages at onset, it is difficult to distinguish dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) from other neurodegenerative dementias based on their clinical manifestations alone. Nuclear medicine imaging has b...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:British journal of radiology 2017-02, Vol.90 (1070), p.20160156
Main Authors: Sakamoto, Fumi, Shiraishi, Shinya, Tsuda, Noriko, Hashimoto, Mamoru, Tomiguchi, Seiji, Ikeda, Manabu, Yamashita, Yasuyuki
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Since the clinical symptoms of different types of dementia frequently overlap, especially in the earlier stages at onset, it is difficult to distinguish dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) from other neurodegenerative dementias based on their clinical manifestations alone. Nuclear medicine imaging has been reported as a high-value index for the objective evaluation and diagnosis of DLB. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether nuclear medicine imaging findings may yield core features to be added to the diagnosis of DLB. We enrolled 332 patients with suspected DLB. All were evaluated by both I-metaiodobenzylguanidine ( I-MIBG) myocardial scintigraphy and I-labelled N-isopropyl-p-iodoamphetamine ( I-IMP). brain perfusion single-photon emission CT. The final clinical diagnosis indicated probable DLB in 92 patients (40 males, 52 females; mean age ± standard deviation, 77.4 ± 6.4 years; range, 56-89 years); 240 patients (98 males, 142 females; mean age, 75.5 ± 9.0 years; range, 70-87 years) were recorded as being without DLB. The accepted core features used for clinical evaluations were fluctuating cognition, visual hallucinations and Parkinsonism. The nuclear medicine evaluation indices were the severity score of cerebral blood flow on I-IMP scintigraphs of the posterior cingulate and praecuneus and a reduction in the blood flow in the occipital lobe. For I-MIBG evaluation, we recorded the early and delayed heart-to-mediastinum (H/M) ratios and the washout rate. Univariate and multivariate analyses of fluctuating cognition, visual hallucinations, Parkinsonism and early H/M ratio in patients with probable and without DLB revealed significant differences. Parameters based on I-IMP studies did not show any significant differences by multivariate analysis. The area under the curve for the early H/M ratio was 0.918; for fluctuating cognition, visual hallucinations and Parkinsonism, it was 0.693, 0.760 and 0.611, respectively, by receiver-operating characteristic analysis. The early H/M ratio of
ISSN:1748-880X