Parenchymal CT correlates of senile dementia (Alzheimer disease): loss of gray-white matter discriminability.

TitleParenchymal CT correlates of senile dementia (Alzheimer disease): loss of gray-white matter discriminability.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1981
AuthorsGeorge AE, de Leon MJ, Ferris SH, Kricheff II
JournalAJNR Am J Neuroradiol
Volume2
Issue3
Pagination205-13
Date Published1981 May-Jun
ISSN0195-6108
KeywordsAged, Atrophy, Brain, Dementia, Humans, Middle Aged, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Abstract

Neuropathologic studies have defined gross anatomic (structural) as well as histologic (parenchymal) changes of senile dementia (Alzheimer disease). This investigation suggests that loss of gray-white matter discriminability by computed tomography (CT) is related to cognitive impairment in this disease. Discriminability is defined as the relative ease of visual differentiation between gray and white tissues. Twenty-six elderly patients with dementia were subjected to extensive psychometric evaluation, a medical and neurologic examination, and CT scanning. Gray and white matter changes were assessed by subjectively evaluating three brain levels, the basal ganglia, the centrum semiovale, and the high convexity, on a five point scale. Quantitated gray and white matter scores were also obtained by sampling CT attenuation values. In addition, CT structural changes were evaluated by previously reported methods. there were significant correlations (P less than 0.05) between the subjectively assessed loss of gray-white matter discriminability at all brain levels and the measures of cognitive decline. At the high convexity level 91% of cognitive measures correlated with loss of gray-white discriminability. In the same patient group no gray-white discriminability correlation with age was demonstrated suggesting that gray-white discriminability does not simply change with age.

Alternate JournalAJNR Am J Neuroradiol
PubMed ID6786056
PubMed Central IDPMC8331507
Grant ListMH 29590 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
Related Institute: 
Brain Health Imaging Institute (BHII)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065