Published May 10, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Segmentation of medial temporal subregions reveals early right-sided involvement in semantic variant PPA

  • 1. Dementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, 8-11 Queen Square, London, WC1N 3BG, UK
  • 2. Centre for Medical Image Computing, Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, University College London, London, UK
  • 3. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, St Thomas' Hospital, King's College London, London, UK

Description

Background: Semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia (svPPA) is a subtype of frontotemporal dementia characterized by asymmetric temporal atrophy.

Methods: We investigated the pattern of medial temporal lobe atrophy in 24 svPPA patients compared to 72 controls using novel approaches to segment the hippocampal and amygdalar subregions on MRIs. Based on semantic knowledge scores, we split the svPPA group into 3 subgroups of early, middle and late disease stage.

Results: Early stage: all left amygdalar and hippocampal subregions (except the tail) were affected in svPPA (21–35% smaller than controls), together with the following amygdalar nuclei in the right hemisphere: lateral, accessory basal and superficial (15–23%). On the right, only the temporal pole was affected among the cortical regions. Middle stage: the left hippocampal tail became affected (28%), together with the other amygdalar nuclei (22–26%), and CA4 (15%) on the right, with orbitofrontal cortex and subcortical structures involvement on the left, and more posterior temporal lobe on the right. Late stage: the remaining right hippocampal regions (except the tail) (19–24%) became affected, with more posterior left cortical and right extra-temporal anterior cortical involvement.

Conclusions: With advanced subregions segmentation, it is possible to detect early involvement of the right medial temporal lobe in svPPA that is not detectable by measuring the amygdala or hippocampus as a whole.

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Additional details

Funding

VPH-DARE@IT – VPH Dementia Research Enabled by IT 601055
European Commission