Dementia MRI

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Dementia Microchapters

Patient Information

Overview

Classification

Causes

Differential Diagnosis

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1];Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: ,Sabeeh Islam, MBBS[2]

Overview

A MRI is commonly performed, although this modality (as is noted below) may not have optimal sensitivity for the diffuse metabolic changes associated with dementia in a patient who shows no gross neurological problems (such as paralysis or weakness) on neurological exam. MRI may suggest normal pressure hydrocephalus, a potentially reversible cause of dementia, and can yield information relevant to other types of dementia, such as infarction (stroke) that would point at a vascular type of dementia.

Asymmetric cortical atrophy is often observed in neurodegenerative dementias and sometimes manifests as disproportionate impairments in the functions mediated by the more atrophic regions.[1]

MRI

References

  1. Neary D (November 1990). "Non Alzheimer's disease forms of cerebral atrophy". J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry. 53 (11): 929–31. doi:10.1136/jnnp.53.11.929. PMC 488269. PMID 2283521.

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