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Stroke, Vol 24, 228-235, Copyright © 1993 by American Heart Association
F Ries, R Horn, J Hillekamp, C Honisch, M Konig and L Solymosi
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The differentiation between the Alzheimer and
multi-infarct types of dementia may still be equivocal considering clinical
criteria, neuropsychological tests, and imaging techniques. Cerebral
microangiopathic alterations underlying multi-infarct dementia should allow
the characterization of dementia subgroups. METHODS: Patients with a
diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia (n = 17; mean age, 69.1 +/- 8.5 years)
or Alzheimer dementia (n = 24, mean age, 65.8 +/- 9.0 years) according to
standard testing criteria, clinical findings, and neuroimaging techniques
(computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging) were investigated
prospectively by transcranial Doppler sonography and compared with a normal
reference group (n = 64; mean age, 61.0 +/- 11.1 years). Transcranial
Doppler sonography allows an indirect evaluation of peripheral flow
resistance in the microcirculatory bed by quantifying pulsatility
characteristics, as reflected in the effective pulsatility range
(time-averaged mean blood flow velocity minus the peak-systolic to
end-diastolic amplitude, in centimeters per second). RESULTS: A total of
204 vessels were investigated in 105 subjects. Mean and diastolic blood
flow velocities as well as the effective pulsatility range were
significantly lower in the multi-infarct dementia group compared with the
Alzheimer and the normal reference groups (p < 0.001). By using receiver
operating characteristic analysis, a cutoff point for effective pulsatility
range values of -5 cm/sec gives a side-dependent sensitivity of
90.48-95.24% and a specificity of 64.71-70.59% in diagnosing Alzheimer-type
dementia; the corresponding sensitivity and specificity for a value of - 2
cm/sec are 82.35-88.24% and 80.95-90.48%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:
Pulsatility changes as reflected by the effective pulsatility range are a
noninvasive additional criterion in the differential diagnosis of dementia.
ARTICLES
Differentiation of multi-infarct and Alzheimer dementia by intracranial hemodynamic parameters
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Bonn, FRG.
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