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Abstract Details

Preliminary Characterization of Language Network Connectivity in a Logopenic Alzheimer’s Population Using Task-based fMRI
Aging, Dementia, and Behavioral Neurology
S1 - Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias (2:00 PM-2:12 PM)
006
lvPPA is characterized by predominant deficits in language function with underlying Alzheimer’s pathology. Patients typically have the greatest atrophy at the left temporoparietal junction and corresponding decreases in resting connectivity within a posterior temporal language network seeded from this region. We hypothesized that early-stage lvPPA patients would show lower connectivity within the posterior temporal language network, but would recruit regions outside of the network, in performing the task.
To investigate task-based functional connectivity differences of a posterior temporal language network in logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia (lvPPA) during a working language memory task.
6 patients with early-stage lvPPA (average CDR 0.5) and 9 matched controls underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while performing the Phonological Short-Term Memory Probe task from the TALSA battery. Patients hear 3 words, a pause, then must determine if a 4th unique word rhymes with any of the original set by pushing a button. A 4-mm radius sphere at the temporoparietal junction, derived from the peak atrophy point in a previously published lvPPA population, was used as the seed for preliminary seed-to-voxel functional connectivity analysis (height by extent threshold of p <0.05, p <0.05).
Task performance was worse in the lvPPA cohort (lvPPA accuracy averaged 58%; HC averaged 92%). In functional connectivity analysis, lvPPA patients showed decreased connectivity from the seed to the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), left inferior temporal gyrus (ITG), medial thalamus, and posterolateral cerebellum. The lvPPA group also showed increased connectivity to motor and somatosensory cortices.
As hypothesized, lvPPA participants showed lower connectivity to regions within the posterior temporal language network (including L IFG and ITG) compared with HC. Their higher connectivity to motor and somatosensory cortex may suggest compensatory recruitment. This pilot study forms the groundwork for future studies investigating task-based functional connectivity in lvPPA.
Authors/Disclosures
Lucas H. Oland
PRESENTER
No disclosure on file
Anne Trainer (Yale University) No disclosure on file
Bronte Tani No disclosure on file
Joyce Li No disclosure on file
Samantha Tun Ms. Tun has nothing to disclose.
Suyeon Ju No disclosure on file
Cheryl Lacadie No disclosure on file
Todd Constable No disclosure on file
Nadine Martin (Home) No disclosure on file
Carolyn Fredericks, MD (Yale School of Medicine, Department of Neurology) The institution of Dr. Fredericks has received research support from Alzheimer's Association. The institution of Dr. Fredericks has received research support from National Institute on Aging.