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The differential diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. Cerebral atrophy versus normal pressure hydrocephalus
George AE; Holodny A; Golomb J; de Leon MJ
This article summarizes the neuroradiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and details the radiologic features that permit the identification of patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). Patients with presumed AD show a characteristic atrophy pattern with specific involvement of the temporal lobes and hippocampus. These findings have prognostic implications. Patients with NPH typically show severe motoric and gait deficits and initially mild cognitive impairment. Marked improvement is shown in select patients after ventricular shunting
PMID: 7743082
ISSN: 1052-5149
CID: 9452
The hippocampus in aging and Alzheimer's disease
de Leon MJ; Convit A; DeSanti S; Golomb J; Tarshish C; Rusinek H; Bobinski M; Ince C; Miller DC; Wisniewski HM
The role of imaging in the evaluation of neurodegenerative disorders is summarized. The primary role of imaging is to exclude potentially treatable disorders such as meningioma, extracerebral hematoma, Wernicke's disease, and hypothyroidism. Atrophic changes dominate in the hippocampal region on Alzheimer's disease versus the anterior, frontal, and temporal lobes in Pick's disease. Signal hypointensity in the putamen on T2-weighted spin-echo images favors poorly drug-responsive Parkinson's disease whereas putaminal hyperintensity is observed with Creutzfeldt-Jacob, Wilson's, and Leigh's diseases. As our population ages, a thorough understanding of imaging findings in a geriatric population assumes an increasing importance
PMID: 7743078
ISSN: 1052-5149
CID: 6602
Nonspecific leukoencephalopathy associated with aging
Golomb J; Kluger A; Gianutsos J; Ferris SH; de Leon MJ; George AE
With advancing age, the periventricular and subcortical white matter becomes susceptible to a heterogeneous assortment of tissue alterations that cannot be easily categorized in terms of traditionally defined neuropathologic disease. These alterations, which appear radiolucent on CT and hyperintense on T2-weighted MR imaging, are more common in patients with chronic hypertension and perhaps other microvascular arteriosclerotic risk factors. Examination of the affected tissue reveals a spectrum of histologic change that is graded with respect to pathologic severity. The majority of the alterations are of low histopathologic grade and exert minimal clinical effects. Frequently observed microscopic changes include dilated perivascular (Virchow-Robin) spaces, mild demyelination, gliosis, and diffuse regions neuropil vacuolation. Associated clinical abnormalities, when present, are usually confined to deficits of attention, mental processing speed, and psychomotor control. These deficits may often be demonstrable only through neuropsychologic testing. There is some evidence that the cognitive symptoms of AD may be exacerbated by the concomitant presence of these white matter alterations, but an etiologic link between AD and radiographically detectible white matter changes remains speculative. Occasionally, histologically severe white matter lesions may occur that result in dementia and focal neurologic impairment. These lesions are characterized by extensive arteriosclerosis, diffuse white matter necrosis, and lacunar infarction; affected patients may receive a diagnosis of Binswanger's disease or subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. Nevertheless, severe ischemic white matter pathology of this type is uncommon as an explanation for serious neurologic dysfunction, and clinicians must carefully weigh other categories of neuropathology before making a diagnosis of Binswanger's disease. Alternative diagnostic considerations include neurodegenerative illnesses such as AD, cerebral infarction, neoplasm, and other forms of white matter pathology such as those due to infection, inflammation, a primary demyelinative condition, or metabolic leukodystrophy
PMID: 7743083
ISSN: 1052-5149
CID: 6631
Neurology for non-neurologists
Weinreb, Herman J.; Chou, James C.-Y.; Wisniewski, Thomas; Golomb, Jamie; Hiesiger, Emile M.; Sussman, Norman; Rapoport, David; Henry, Katherine; Krishna, Ranga; Kricheff, Irvin I.; Stiller, Keith
[Irvington, NY] : Pass the Boards, c1995
Extent: 8 videocassettes : sd., col. ; 1/2 in
ISBN: n/a
CID: 512
THE CASE FOR THE INTERUNCAL DISTANCE - COMMENT [Comment]
DELEON, MJ; CONVIT, A; DESANTI, S; TARSHISH, C; FERRIS, SH; GEORGE, AE; RUSINEK, H; ARENA, L; GOLOMB, J; BOBINSKI, M
ISI:A1994PB62200016
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 52386
SELECTIVE MEDIAL AND LATERAL TEMPORAL-LOBE PATHOLOGY IN CASES AT-RISK FOR AD - DIAGNOSTIC ROLE OF PET [Meeting Abstract]
DESANTI, S; DELEON, MJ; TARSHISH, C; GOLOMB, J; MCRAE, T; KLUGER, A; RUSINEK, H; CONVIT, A; FOWLER, J; VOLKOW, N
ISI:A1994NV60900606
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 52413
SPECIFIC HIPPOCAMPAL ATROPHY IN CASES AT RISK FOR AD - A VOLUMETRIC MRI STUDY [Meeting Abstract]
CONVIT, A; DELEON, MJ; TARSHISH, CY; DESANTI, S; GOLOMB, J; KLUGER, A; TSUI, W; INCE, C; RUSINEK, H; GEORGE, AE
ISI:A1994NV60900605
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 52412
CSF CONCENTRATIONS OF CRF IN ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE AND NORMAL-PRESSURE HYDROCEPHALUS [Meeting Abstract]
POMARA, N; BISSETTE, G; GOLOMB, J; TARSHISH, C; INCE, C; DESIMONE, P; FERRIS, S; DELEON, M
ISI:A1994NV60900501
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 52409
Hippocampal atrophy correlates with severe cognitive impairment in elderly patients with suspected normal pressure hydrocephalus
Golomb J; de Leon MJ; George AE; Kluger A; Convit A; Rusinek H; de Santi S; Litt A; Foo SH; Ferris SH
Measurements of hippocampal formation atrophy using MRI have been useful in distinguishing demented patients with a diagnosis of probable Alzheimer's disease from cognitively normal controls. To determine whether there is a similar relationship between hippocampal size and dementia in elderly patients suspected of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), the authors obtained mini-mental status examination (MMSE) scores and MRI measurements of hippocampal size and CSF volume on 16 elderly patients whose severe ventriculomegaly and unexplained gait impairment made NPH a probable diagnosis. Hippocampal size correlated strongly with MMSE score (r = 0.75, p < 0.001); no significant MMSE correlation was found for ventricular CSF volume or extra-ventricular/ventricular CSF ratio. It was concluded that hippocampal atrophy is associated with severe cognitive dysfunction in many elderly patients with a diagnosis of NPH. As a hypothesis for further investigation, the detection of such atrophy may help identify cases where the presence of a pathology of Alzheimer's disease complicates the diagnosis of NPH
PMCID:1072921
PMID: 8201330
ISSN: 0022-3050
CID: 6390
Hippocampal formation size in normal human aging: a correlate of delayed secondary memory performance
Golomb J; Kluger A; de Leon MJ; Ferris SH; Convit A; Mittelman MS; Cohen J; Rusinek H; De Santi S; George AE
Although mild progressive memory impairment is commonly associated with normal human aging, it is unclear whether this phenomenon can be explained by specific structural brain changes. In a research sample of 54 medically healthy and cognitively normal elderly persons (ages 55-87, x = 69.0 +/- 7.9), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to derive head-size-adjusted measurements of the hippocampal formation (HF) (dentate gyrus, hippocampus proper, alveus, fimbria, subiculum), the superior temporal gyrus (STG), and the subarachnoid cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (to estimate generalized cerebral atrophy). Subjects were administered tests of primary memory (digit span) and tests of secondary memory with immediate and delayed recall components (paragraph, paired associate, list recall; facial recognition). Separate composite scores for the immediate and delayed components were created by combining, with equal weighting, the subtests of each category. The WAIS vocabulary subtest was used as a control measure for language and intelligence. A highly significant correlation (P < 0.001), independent of age, gender, and generalized cerebral atrophy was found between HF size and delayed memory performance. No significant correlations were found between HF size and primary or immediate memory performance. STG size was not significantly correlated with any of the composite memory variables. These results suggest that HF atrophy may play an important independent role in contributing to the memory loss experienced by many aging adults
PMID: 10467585
ISSN: 1072-0502
CID: 6632