1/Having trouble remembering how to differentiate dementias on imaging? Is looking at dementia PET scans one of your PET peeves? Here’s a thread to show you how to remember the imaging findings in dementia & never forget!
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2/The most common functional imaging used in dementia is FDG PET. And the most common dementia is Alzheimer’s disease (AD). On PET, AD demonstrates a typical Nike swoosh pattern—with decreased metabolism in the parietal & temporal regions
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3/The swoosh rapidly tapers anteriorly—& so does hypometabolism in AD in the temporal lobe. It usually spares the anterior temporal poles. So in AD look for a rapidly tapering Nike swoosh, w/hypometabolism in the parietal/temporal regions—sparing the anterior temporal pole
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4/Medially, in AD, there’s involvement of the precuneus & posterior cingulate. In fact, the earliest AD findings may be in the precuneus So medially, instead of a Nike swoosh, you see an Adidas logo—w/a wedge in the region of the precuneus widening anteriorly to the cingulate
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5/So in AD, look for the sneaker signs: --Adidas logo medially in the region of the precuneus --Nike swoosh along the parietal & temporal regions, sparing the anterior temporal pole. So if you see sneaker logos—it’s AD. Just call it!
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6/Dementia w/Lewy Bodies (DLB) also has temporoparietal hypometabolism—but it also involves the occipital cortex—a very specific finding for DLB. DLB also extends to the ant. temporal cortex. Together, these regions of hypometabolism look more like an L. And Lewy starts w/an L
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7/Next is frontotemporal dementia. As one might expect, it has hypometabolism in…wait for it…the frontal & temporal regions. This is one for Captain Obvious. However, it is a little more complicated than that.
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8/Medially, frontotemporal dementia involves the anterior cingulate gyrus. I remember this bc the involvement of the anterior cingulate gyrus makes a hook—so it looks like a lowercase letter f—and frontotemporal starts with f
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9/There are also variants of frontotemporal dementia that will not show the classic frontal & temporal involvement. First, is the frontal variant. This only involves the frontal lobe. It presents w/disinhibition as one would expect to see with frontal lobe involvement
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10/Temporal variant involves temporal lobe only & has language problems. Although it may not directly involve Wernicke’s, you can remember language problems bc Wernicke’s is near here So you DON’T need to have BOTH frontal & temporal involvement to have frontotemporal dementia!
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11/Corticobasilar degeneration involves the sensorimotor cortex & basal ganglia. I remember this bc CORTICObasilar goes along the CORTICOspinal tract—so it has hypometabolism at the home of the corticospinal tract, the sensorimotor cortex
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12/You also see basal ganglia & thalamus hypometabolism in corticobasilar degeneration. This makes sense bc corticobasilar contains “BASilar” referring to the BASal ganglia So the 2 regions of hypometabolism in corticobasilar degeneration are in the name—cortex & basal ganglia
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13/A rare dementia is posterior cerebral atrophy (PCA). Like the name, hypometabolism is POSTERIOR—occipital & post temporal lobe. It can be from AD or DLB. I call it posterior CAPE atrophy bc distribution looks a cape—w/arms (ant temporal lobes) sticking out from the cape
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14/You may say PCA looks like typical Lewy Body dementia—but PCA doesn’t usuallly involve ant temporal lobes So the ant temp lobe involvement that gave classic DLB its L shape is cut short—making PCA distribution look more like a c than an L Remember C is PCA & L is Lewy body
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15/Finally, vascular dementia has a variable distribution, depending on the regions infarcted (V is both for Vascular & Variable) These patients may have wedged shaped regions of hypometabolism corresponding to cortical infarcts—remember this bc a wedge is just an inverted V.
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16/So now you know the patterns of hypometabolism on PET for the major dementias This list isn’t all inclusive & there can be variations or even mixed dementias But hopefully this gives you a starting point you won’t soon forget!
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@teachplaygrub One of the rare threads that actually makes complex imaging patterns intuitive.
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