Clinical imaging in dementia with Lewy bodies.
Ajenthan SurendranathanJohn Tiernan O'BrienPublished in: Evidence-based mental health (2018)
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a common neurodegenerative dementia in older people; however, the clinical features, particularly cognitive fluctuations and rapid eye movement sleep disorder, are often hard to elicit, leading to difficulty in making the diagnosis clinically. Here we examine the literature for the evidence behind imaging modalities that could assist in making the diagnosis. Dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging remains the best modality for differentiation from dementia of Alzheimer's type with high sensitivity and specificity reported based on pathological diagnoses. 123Iodine-metaiodobenzylguanidine myocardial scintigraphy (MIBG) however is rapidly becoming an alternative imaging modality for the diagnosis of DLB, though studies assessing its accuracy with postmortem verification are still awaited. However, there are suggestions that MIBG may be better in the differentiation of vascular parkinsonism from DLB than DAT scans but may have lower sensitivity for detecting DLB compared with the 80% sensitivity seen in DAT imaging. Structural MRI scans have long been used for the diagnosis of dementia; however, their utility in DLB is limited to revealing the presence of coexisting Alzheimer's disease. Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET is an alternative biomarker that can also differentiate Alzheimer's disease and DLB but lacks the evidence base of both DAT and MIBG scans.
Keyphrases
- mild cognitive impairment
- high resolution
- computed tomography
- cognitive impairment
- cognitive decline
- pet ct
- positron emission tomography
- contrast enhanced
- heart failure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- left ventricular
- fluorescence imaging
- photodynamic therapy
- magnetic resonance
- atrial fibrillation
- mass spectrometry
- sleep quality
- dual energy
- uric acid
- diffusion weighted imaging
- drug induced