articleNeurologyAug 7, 2006Closed access

[ 11 C]PIB in a nondemented population

Services Hospital

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Beta-amyloid (Abeta) plaques are the hallmark of Alzheimer disease (AD). A PET imaging tracer that binds to Abeta plaques in vivo, N-methyl-[(11)C]2-(4'-methylaminophenyl)-6-hydroxybenzothiazole (or [(11)C]PIB for "Pittsburgh Compound-B"), has significantly higher binding in subjects diagnosed with dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) compared to nondemented controls. The authors used this imaging technique to investigate whether abnormal binding occurs in clinically normal individuals, prior to the development of cognitive changes.

Methods

Forty-one nondemented subjects (age range 20 to 86 years) and 10 patients with DAT (age range 66 to 86 years) underwent [(11)C]PIB PET scanning. Regions of interest were drawn on the MRI over the cerebellar, prefrontal, lateral temporal, occipital, gyrus rectus, precuneus, and striatal cortex. Binding potential values (BPs), proportional to the density of [(11)C]PIB-Abeta binding sites, were calculated using the Logan graphical analysis and the cerebellar cortex for a reference tissue.

Citation impact

1,033
total citations
FWCI
32.29
Percentile
100%
References
44
Citations per year

Authors

10

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Pittsburgh compound B
  • Precuneus
  • Alzheimer's disease
  • Psychology
  • Pathology
  • Population
  • Dementia
  • Central nervous system disease
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