Valerio Zerbi1,2, Diane Jansen1,
Andor Veltien2, Carola I. F. Janssen1, Bastian
Zinnhardt1, Daan van Rooij1, Yang Liu3, Alan
J. Wright2, P. Jos Dederen1, Laus M. Broersen4,
Amanda J. Kiliaan1, Arend Heerschap2
1Anatomy, Radboud
University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, Netherlands; 2Radiology,
Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, Netherlands; 3Universitt
des Saarlandes, Homburg, Germany; 4Danone Research, Wageningen,
Netherlands
Research into Alzheimers disease (AD) suggests that docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and cholesterol may affect the course of AD, possibly by influencing cerebral circulation and brain metabolism. Here we investigated cerebral blood volume (CBV) and hippocampal metabolite levels with MR imaging and spectroscopy in three different mouse models for genetic AD (APP/PS1) and atherosclerosis (ApoE4 and ApoE-ko) fed with cholesterol-enriched and DHA-enriched diets. Results showed decreased CBV, decreased NAA and increased myo-inositol in APP/PS1, and partly in ApoE4 and ApoE knockout mice. The DHA diet increased NAA levels in the AD mouse model in agreement with neurocognitive improvement.