| Title |
Homocysteine and brain atrophy on MRI of non-demented elderly |
| Published in |
Brain: a journal of neurology. ISSN 0006-8950. |
| Author |
Heijer, den T. (Tom); Vermeer, S.E. (Sarah); Clarke, R.; Oudkerk, M. (Matthijs); Koudstaal, P.J. (Peter); Breteler, M.M.B. (Monique); Hofman, A. (Albert) |
| Date |
2003-01-01 |
| Language |
English |
| Type |
article |
| Abstract |
Patients with Alzheimer's disease have higher plasma homocysteine levels
than controls, but it is uncertain whether higher plasma homocysteine
levels are involved in the early pathogenesis of the disease. Hippocampal,
amygdalar and global brain atrophy on brain MRI have been proposed as
early markers of Alzheimer's disease. In the Rotterdam Scan Study, a
population-based study of age-related brain changes in 1077 non-demented
people aged 60-90 years, we investigated the association between plasma
homocysteine levels and severity of hippocampal, amygdalar and global
brain atrophy on MRI. We used axial T(1)-weighted MRIs to visualize global
cortical brain atrophy (measured semi-quantitatively; range 0-15) and a 3D
HASTE (half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin echo) sequence in
511 participants to measure hippocampal and amygdalar volumes. We had
non-fasting plasma homocysteine levels in 1031 of the participants and in
505 of the participants with hippocampal and amygdalar volumes.
Individuals with higher plasma homocysteine levels had, on average, more
cortical atrophy [0.23 units (95% CI 0.07-0.38 units) per standard
deviation increase in plasma homocysteine levels] and more hippocampal
atrophy [difference in left hippocampal volume -0.05 ml (95% CI -0.09 to
-0.01) and in right hippocampal volume -0.03 ml (95% CI -0.07 to 0.01) per
standard deviation increase in plasma homocysteine levels]. No association
was observed between plasma homocysteine levels and amygdalar atrophy.
These results support the hypothesis that higher plasma homocysteine
levels are associated with more atrophy of the hippocampus and cortical
regions in elderly at risk of Alzheimer's disease. |
| Publication |
http://hdl.handle.net/1765/10034 |
| Persistent Identifier |
urn:NBN:nl:ui:15-1765/10034 |
| Metadata |
XML |
| Repository |
Erasmus University Rotterdam |