Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Radiol. Mar 28, 2016; 8(3): 240-254
Published online Mar 28, 2016. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v8.i3.240
Table 1 Causes of dementia and dementia syndromes
Types of dementia
Primary dementias
Alzheimer’s disease
Late-onset Alzheimer’s disease - most common form 60%-70% of all dementias
Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease - under 65 yr of age, chromosome 14 implicated, Down’s syndrome
Familial AD - inheritable form present in at least 2 generations within families
Dementia with Lewy bodies
Frontotemporal dementia
Mixed dementia - more than one form of pathology for, e.g., Lewy bodies with Alzheimer’s disease
Less common forms
Parkinson’s disease
Progressive supranuclear palsy
Huntington’s disease
Secondary dementias
Vascular/multi infarct dementia
Vascular with Alzheimer’s disease
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
Intracranial mass lesions
Normal pressure hydrocephalus
Subdural haematomas
Trauma
Infections - primarily human immunodeficiency virus
Alcohol
Other documented causes
Vitamin deficiencies - vitamins E, B and folic acid are implicated
Medications
Other causes like depression
Table 2 Summary
DementiaPathological featureStructural imaging CT/MRIMolecular imaging (non-specific)Molecular imaging (specific)Research
Alzheimer’s diseasePrimary neurodegenerative, extracellular amyloid plaques (Aβ42), intracellular tau aggregates[13], Autosomal dominant early onset inherited form - presenelins are also implicated[22]Hippocampal-medial temporal lobe (CA2 and CA3 hippocampal subregions are more affected), posterior cingulate gyrus and postero-medial parietal lobe atrophy on MRI and CTSPECT1- ↓perfusion FDG PET2- ↓glucose uptake in medial temporal lobe and hippocampi[39-41]11C PIB, Florbetapir3 uptake in amyloid plaques[42]Tau specific ligands -PET, MRI-BOLD, fMRI-↓connectivity in DMN, MR perfusion[38], MR spectroscopy, DTI -↓medial temporal lobe and precuneus[34], VBM
LBDIntracellular Lewy bodies-aggregates of α-synuclein particles in pre-synaptic terminals Overlaps with Parkinson’s diseaseAtrophy in inferior frontal lobe, visual cortex, insula, hypothalamus, midbrain, caudate, putamen and anterior hippocampi (CA1 subregion)[86]SPECT -↓in putamen and caudate, visual cortex[88,89] FDG PET -↓in visual cortices[88-90]FP-CIT-↓uptake in putamen and caudate[79] Cholinergic PET/SPECT- ↓in medial occipital lobe[95] 123I MIBG-↓cardiac uptake[96]Diffusion weighted MR-DTI, ↓ in visual association cortex and posterior putamen MRS, fMRI ASL-MR
FTDVarious proteins including tauopathies, TDP43, FUS- clinically can overlap with PSP, MSA, MND[100,101]Variable-predominantly anterior frontal, temporal and insular atrophy[102,103]FDG PET and SPECT-↓anterior, frontal and temporal uptake[107]-fMRI, DTI-↓ in WM of affected regions[104] fMRI-↓"salient" network’ but ↑DMN connectivity on resting fMRI- unlike AD[105,106]
Vascular dementiaSmall and large vessel disease - vascular risk factors like HT, smoking and DM implicated[61] CADASIL- hereditary formCT-cortical infarct, macrohaemorrhage, frontal subcortical and periventricular WMH, lacunes[62-67] MRI-CT features as above and PVS, CMBFDG PET and rCBF SPECT-↓ frontal and periventricular regions--
CJD sCJD vCJDPrion protein - sources include food, tissues, genetic variationMRI-↑signal on T2W and DWI in the caudate and cortex ("cortical ribboning") MRI-↑ on T2W and DWI in the pulvinar of thalami
Autoimmune encephalitis related dementiaPreviously limbic encephalitis -neuron specific CSF autoantibodies Paraneoplastic syndromeMRI-↑ signal on T2W and FLAIR in the mesial temporal lobeFDG PET -↑ uptake in the medial temporal lobe Whole body PET to identify underlying primary malignancy[110]