Ernesto Sanz-Arigita1, Nelleke Tolboom2,
Jolanda Boverhoff2, A.A. Lammertsma2, R. Boellaard2,
M. Yaqub2, A.D. Windhorst2, Cornelius
1Radiology, VUmc, Amsterdam, North
Holland, Netherlands; 2Nuclear Medicine and PET Research, VUmc,
Amsterdam, Netherlands; 3Neurophysiology, VUmc, Amsterdam,
Netherlands; 4Neurology, VUmc, Amsterdam, Netherlands; 5Radiology,
VUmc, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Alzheimer-related
differences in basal functional brain networks are likely be related to the
regional distribution of neuropathology. To explore this relationship, we
have scanned the same population of AD patients and age-matched controls both
with fMRI in resting state condition and PET, employing two different
amyloid-b tracers: 11C-PIB reveals the distribution of neurofibrillary
tangles and 18F-FDDNP binds predominantly to amyloid plaques. The functional
networks affected in AD, and the distribution of neuropathology largely
overlaps. We will demonstrate the specific relationship between either type
of amyloid pathology and particular functional networks.