Regional cerebral blood flow as assessed by principal component analysis and 99m Tc-HMPAO SPET in healthy subjects at rest: normal distribution and effect of age and gender

The increasing implementation of standardisation techniques in brain
research and clinical diagnosis has highlighted the importance of reliable
baseline data from normal control subjects for inter-subject analysis. In
this context, knowledge of the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF)
distribution in normal ageing is a factor of the utmost importance. In the
present study, rCBF was investigated in 50 healthy volunteers (25 men, 25
women), aged 31-78 years, who were examined at rest by means of
single-photon emission tomography (SPET) using technetium-99m
d,l-hexamethylpropylene amine oxime (HMPAO). After normalising the CBF
data, 27 left and 27 right volumes of interest (VOIs) were selected and
automatically outlined by standardisation software (computerised brain
atlas). The heavy load of flow data thus obtained was reduced in number and
grouped in factors by means of principal component analysis (PCA). PCA
extracted 12 components explaining 81% of the variance and including the
vast majority of cortical and subcortical regions. Analysis of variance and
regression analyses were performed for rCBF, age and gender before PCA was
applied and subsequently for each single extracted factor. There was a
significantly higher CBF on the right side than on the left side (P<0.001).
In the overall analysis, a significant decrease was found in CBF (P=0.05)
with increasing age, and this decrease was particularly evident in the left
hemisphere (P=0.006). When gender was specifically analysed, CBF was found
to decrease significantly with increasing age in females (P=0.037) but not
in males. Furthermore, a significant decrease in rCBF with increasing age
was found in the brain vertex (P=0.05), left frontotemporal cortex
(P=0.012) and temporocingulate cortex (P=0.003). By contrast, relative rCBF
in central structures increased with age (P=0.001). The ability of
standardisation software and PCA to identify functionally connected brain
regions might contribute to a better understanding of the relationships
between rCBF at rest, anatomically defined brain structures, ageing and
gender.

Publication type: 
Articolo
Author or Creator: 
Pagani M.
Salmaso D.
Jonsson C.
Hatherly R.
Jacobsson H.
Larsson S.A.
Wagner A.
Publisher: 
Springer., Heidelberg;, Germania
Source: 
European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging (Print) 29 (2002): 67–75.
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Pagani M., Salmaso D., Jonsson C., Hatherly R., Jacobsson H., Larsson S.A., Wagner A./titolo:Regional cerebral blood flow as assessed by principal component analysis and 99m Tc-HMPAO SPET in healthy subjects at rest: normal dist
Date: 
2002
Resource Identifier: 
http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/46695
Language: 
Eng