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Featured researches published by R. J. Ivnik.


Neurology | 2000

Rates of Hippocampal Atrophy Correlate with Change in Clinical Status in Aging and AD

Clifford R. Jack; Ronald C. Petersen; Y. Xu; P. C. O'Brien; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; B. F. Boeve; Eric G. Tangalos; Emre Kokmen

Background: The cognitive continuum in the elderly population can be conceptually divided into those who are functioning normally (control subjects), those with a mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and those with probable AD. Objectives: To test the hypothesis that the annualized rates of hippocampal atrophy differ as a function of both baseline and change in clinical group membership (control, MCI, or AD). Methods: The authors identified 129 subjects from the Mayo Clinic AD Research Center/AD Patient Registry who met established criteria for normal control subjects, MCI, or probable AD, both at entry and at the time of a subsequent clinical follow-up evaluation 3 ± 1 years later. Each subject underwent an MRI examination of the head at the time of the initial assessment and at follow-up clinical assessment; the annualized percentage change in hippocampal volume was computed. Subjects who were classified as controls or patients with MCI at baseline could either remain cognitively stable or could decline to a lower functioning group over the period of observation. Results: The annualized rates of hippocampal volume loss for each of the three initial clinical groups decreased progressively in the following order: AD > MC > control. Within the control and MCI groups, those who declined had a significantly greater rate of volume loss than those who remained clinically stable. The mean annualized rates of hippocampal atrophy by follow-up clinical group were: control-stable 1.73%, control-decliner 2.81%, MCI-stable 2.55%, MCI-decliner 3.69%, AD 3.5%. Conclusion: Rates of hippocampal atrophy match both baseline cognitive status and the change in cognitive status over time in elderly persons who lie along the cognitive continuum from normal to MCI to AD.


Neurology | 2004

Comparison of Different MRI Brain Atrophy Rate Measures with Clinical Disease Progression in AD

C. R. Jack; Maria Shiung; Jeffrey L. Gunter; P. C. O'Brien; Stephen D. Weigand; D. S. Knopman; B. F. Boeve; R. J. Ivnik; G. E. Smith; Ruth H. Cha; Eric G. Tangalos; R. C. Petersen

Objective: To correlate different methods of measuring rates of brain atrophy from serial MRI with corresponding clinical change in normal elderly subjects, patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and patients with probable Alzheimer disease (AD). Methods: One hundred sixty subjects were recruited from the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and Alzheimer’s Disease Patient Registry Studies. At baseline, 55 subjects were cognitively normal, 41 met criteria for MCI, and 64 met criteria for AD. Each subject underwent an MRI examination of the brain at the time of the baseline clinical assessment and then again at the time of a follow-up clinical assessment, 1 to 5 years later. The annualized changes in volume of four structures were measured from the serial MRI studies: hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, whole brain, and ventricle. Rates of change on several cognitive tests/rating scales were also assessed. Subjects who were classified as normal or MCI at baseline could either remain stable or convert to a lower-functioning group. AD subjects were dichotomized into slow vs fast progressors. Results: All four atrophy rates were greater among normal subjects who converted to MCI or AD than among those who remained stable, greater among MCI subjects who converted to AD than among those who remained stable, and greater among fast than slow AD progressors. In general, atrophy on MRI was detected more consistently than decline on specific cognitive tests/rating scales. With one exception, no differences were found among the four MRI rate measures in the strength of the correlation with clinical deterioration at different stages of the disease. Conclusions: These data support the use of rates of change from serial MRI studies in addition to standard clinical/psychometric measures as surrogate markers of disease progression in AD. Estimated sample sizes required to power a therapeutic trial in MCI were an order of magnitude less for MRI than for change measures based on cognitive tests/rating scales.


Neurology | 2000

Regional metabolic patterns in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease A 1H MRS study

Kejal Kantarci; C. R. Jack; Y. Xu; N. G. Campeau; P. C. O'Brien; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; B. F. Boeve; Emre Kokmen; Eric G. Tangalos; R. C. Petersen

Background: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a recently described transitional clinical state between normal aging and AD. Assuming that amnestic MCI patients had pathologic changes corresponding to an early phase and probable AD patients to a later phase of the disease progression, the authors could approximate the temporal course of proton MR spectroscopic (1H MRS) alterations in AD with a cross-sectional sampling scheme. Methods: The authors compared 1H MRS findings in the superior temporal lobe, posterior cingulate gyri, and medial occipital lobe in 21 patients with MCI, 21 patients with probable AD, and 63 elderly controls. These areas are known to be involved at different neurofibrillary pathologic stages of AD. Results: The N-acetylaspartate (NAA)/creatine (Cr) ratios were significantly lower in AD patients compared to both MCI and normal control subjects in the left superior temporal and the posterior cingulate volumes of interest (VOI) and there were no between-group differences in the medial occipital VOI. Myoinositol (MI)/Cr ratios measured from the posterior cingulate VOI were significantly higher in both MCI and AD patients than controls. The choline (Cho)/Cr ratios measured from the posterior cingulate VOI were higher in AD patients compared to both MCI and control subjects. Conclusion: These findings suggest that the initial 1H MRS change in the pathologic progression of AD is an increase in MI/Cr. A decrease in NAA/Cr and an increase in Cho/Cr develop later in the disease course.


Neurology | 2005

Brain Atrophy Rates Predict Subsequent Clinical Conversion in Normal Elderly and Amnestic MCI

Clifford R. Jack; Maria Shiung; Stephen D. Weigand; P. C. O'Brien; Jeffrey L. Gunter; B. F. Boeve; D. S. Knopman; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; Eric G. Tangalos; R. C. Petersen

Objective: To test the hypothesis that the atrophy rate measured from serial MRI studies is associated with time to subsequent clinical conversion to a more impaired state in both cognitively healthy elderly subjects and in subjects with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Methods: Ninety-one healthy elderly patients and 72 patients with amnestic MCI who met inclusion criteria were identified from the Mayo Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and Alzheimer’s Disease Patient Registry. Atrophy rates of four different brain structures—hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, whole brain, and ventricle—were measured from a pair of MRI studies separated by 1 to 2 years. The time of the second scan marked the beginning of the clinical observation period. Results: During follow-up, 13 healthy patients converted to MCI or Alzheimer disease (AD), whereas 39 MCI subjects converted to AD. Among those healthy at baseline, only larger ventricular annual percent volume change (APC) was associated with a higher risk of conversion (hazard ratio for a 1-SD increase 1.9, p = 0.03). Among MCI subjects, both greater ventricular volume APC (hazard ratio for a 1-SD increase 1.7, p < 0.001) and greater whole brain APC (hazard ratio for a 1-SD increase 1.4, p = 0.007) increased the risk of conversion to AD. Both ventricular APC (hazard ratio for a 1-SD increase 1.59, p = 0.001) and whole brain APC (hazard ratio for a 1-SD increase 1.32, p = 0.009) provided additional predictive information to covariate-adjusted cross-sectional hippocampal volume at baseline about the risk of converting from MCI to AD. Discussion: Higher whole brain and ventricle atrophy rates 1 to 2 years before baseline are associated with an increased hazard of conversion to a more impaired state. Combining a measure of hippocampal volume at baseline with a measure of either whole brain or ventricle atrophy rates from serial MRI scans provides complimentary predictive information about the hazard of subsequent conversion from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer disease. However, overlap among those who did vs those who did not convert indicate that these measures are unlikely to provide absolute prognostic information for individual patients.


Neurology | 2000

Usefulness of MRI measures of entorhinal cortex versus hippocampus in AD

Y. Xu; C. R. Jack; P. C. O'Brien; Emre Kokmen; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; B. F. Boeve; R. G. Tangalos; Ronald C. Petersen

Objective: MRI-based measurements of hippocampal atrophy are a sensitive indicator of the early pathologic degeneration of the medial temporal lobe in AD. However, AD pathology appears first in the transentorhinal/entorhinal cortex, not the hippocampus. The authors tested the hypothesis that MRI-based measurements of the entorhinal cortex are more sensitive than measurements of hippocampal volume in discriminating among three clinical groups; controls, patients with a mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and patients with mild probable AD. Methods: The authors studied 30 controls, 30 patients with MCI, and 30 patients with AD who were matched among clinical groups on age, gender, and education. All underwent a standardized MRI protocol from which the authors made measurements of hippocampal volume, entorhinal cortex volume, and the cumulative length of the medial border of the entorhinal cortex. Results: Pairwise intergroup differences (p < 0.01) were found for all MRI measurements with the exception of the cumulative length of the entorhinal cortex, which did not differentiate controls from MCI patients. Whereas the hippocampal and entorhinal cortex volume measurements provided slightly better intergroup discrimination than the entorhinal distance measurement, overall differences in discriminating ability among the three MRI measurements were minor. Conclusions: Despite the theoretical rationale for the superiority of entorhinal measurements in early AD, the authors found MRI measurements of the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex were approximately equivalent at intergroup discrimination. Measurements of the hippocampus may be preferable because MRI depiction of the boundaries of the entorhinal cortex can be obscured by anatomic ambiguity, image artifact, or both.


Neurology | 1998

REM sleep behavior disorder and degenerative dementia: an association likely reflecting Lewy body disease.

Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber; Tanis J. Ferman; Emre Kokmen; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; Joseph E. Parisi; Eric J. Olson; R. C. Petersen

Background: REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) has been reported with various neurodegenerative disorders, most frequently in disorders with Lewy body pathology. RBD often precedes the onset of PD, and a recent prospective study showed that 38% of patients with RBD eventually developed PD. Methods: We identified 37 patients with degenerative dementia and a history of bursts of vigorous movement of the arms and legs with vocalization during sleep and associated with dream recall. Patients with and without two or more signs of parkinsonism were compared. Clinical, laboratory, and neuropsychometric features were analyzed, and criteria for the clinical diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) were applied to all patients. Results: Thirty-four of the 37 patients were male with mean age at onset of 61.5 years for RBD and 68.1 years for cognitive decline. RBD commenced before or concurrently with dementia in all patients but two. Parkinsonism (two or more signs) occurred in 54% of the sample (20/37), with a mean age at onset of 69.1 years. Polysomnography (PSG) confirmed RBD in all patients studied. Neuropsychological testing demonstrated impaired perceptual-organizational skills, verbal fluency, and marked constructional dyspraxia in more than one-half the patients. There were no statistically significant differences in the frequency of clinical features or in neuropsychological performance between patients with and without parkinsonism. Thirty-four patients (92%) met criteria for clinically possible or probably DLB. Three patients were autopsied; all had limbic with or without neocortical Lewy bodies. Conclusions: We report a group of predominantly male patients with a characteristic association of RBD and degenerative dementia. The clinical and neuropsychometric features of the groups of patients with and without parkinsonism are similar. We hypothesize that the underlying pathology in these patients is DLB.


Neurology | 2000

Memory and MRI-based hippocampal volumes in aging and AD

Ronald C. Petersen; Clifford R. Jack; Y. Xu; S. C. Waring; P. C. O'Brien; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; Eric G. Tangalos; Bradley F. Boeve; Emre Kokmen

Objective: To demonstrate structural–functional relationships between MRI-based volumetric measurements of medial temporal lobe structures and cognitive function. Background: Previous work has documented the ability of MRI-based measurements of the hippocampus to discriminate between age-matched control subjects and patients with very mild AD. Relatively less is known about the correlation between medial temporal lobe structures and cognitive functions. Method: We evaluated structural–functional relationships among the hippocampal formation, parahippocampal gyrus, and amygdala, and measures of memory, language, and general cognitive performance in 220 probable AD patients and normal control subjects. Standardized instruments of memory and general cognitive function were used to assess subjects enrolled in a longitudinal study of aging and dementia. Results: The volume of the hippocampal formation predicted performance on most acquisition and recall measures across the spectrum of normal aging and AD. If the groups were segregated, most of the expected associations between medial temporal lobe structures and memory measures were observed in the AD patients. Conclusion: MRI-based hippocampal volumetry accurately depicts the structural–functional relationships between memory loss and hippocampal damage across the spectrum from normal aging to dementia.


Neurology | 2010

Prevalence of mild cognitive impairment is higher in men The Mayo Clinic Study of Aging

R. C. Petersen; Rosebud O. Roberts; D. S. Knopman; Yonas E. Geda; Ruth H. Cha; Vernon S. Pankratz; B. F. Boeve; Eric G. Tangalos; R. J. Ivnik; Walter A. Rocca

Objective: We investigated the prevalence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in Olmsted County, MN, using in-person evaluations and published criteria. Methods: We evaluated an age- and sex-stratified random sample of Olmsted County residents who were 70–89 years old on October 1, 2004, using the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale, a neurologic evaluation, and neuropsychological testing to assess 4 cognitive domains: memory, executive function, language, and visuospatial skills. Information for each participant was reviewed by an adjudication panel and a diagnosis of normal cognition, MCI, or dementia was made using published criteria. Results: Among 1,969 subjects without dementia, 329 subjects had MCI, with a prevalence of 16.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] 14.4–17.5) for any MCI, 11.1% (95% CI 9.8–12.3) for amnestic MCI, and 4.9% (95% CI 4.0–5.8) for nonamnestic MCI. The prevalence of MCI increased with age and was higher in men. The prevalence odds ratio (OR) in men was 1.54 (95% CI 1.21–1.96; adjusted for age, education, and nonparticipation). The prevalence was also higher in subjects who never married and in subjects with an APOE ε3ε4 or ε4ε4 genotype. MCI prevalence decreased with increasing number of years of education (p for linear trend <0.0001). Conclusions: Our study suggests that approximately 16% of elderly subjects free of dementia are affected by MCI, and amnestic MCI is the most common type. The higher prevalence of MCI in men may suggest that women transition from normal cognition directly to dementia at a later age but more abruptly.


Neurology | 1994

Memory function in very early Alzheimer's disease

R. C. Petersen; G. E. Smith; R. J. Ivnik; Emre Kokmen; Eric G. Tangalos

Article abstract –The detection of very early Alzheimers disease (AD) can be important for both theoretical and practical reasons. Typically, a memory impairment is the first sign of incipient disease, but the early clinical diagnosis can be challenging. We investigated several aspects of memory function in AD and normal aging to determine which indices of performance were most sensitive at detecting early impairments. We evaluated 106 pairs of patients with probable AD and matched controls from the Mayo Clinic Alzheimers Disease Patient Registry using a logistic regression model that included measures of memory function, verbal and nonverbal intelligence, attention, and language. Results indicated that an index of learning, especially with semantic cuing, was most sensitive at separating the two groups. We then matched subsets of individuals from the larger groups of AD and control subjects on the Mini-Mental State Examination (range of scores, 24 to 26). A logistic regression analysis on these matched groups yielded the same results. A measure of learning with facilitation of performance using cues appears to be the best discriminator at detecting very mild AD. These measures can be useful in selecting patients for interventional strategies.


Neurology | 2003

Comparison of memory fMRI response among normal, MCI, and Alzheimer’s patients

Mary M. Machulda; H. A. Ward; B. Borowski; Jeffrey L. Gunter; Ruth H. Cha; P. C. O'Brien; Ronald C. Petersen; B. F. Boeve; D. S. Knopman; David F. Tang-Wai; R. J. Ivnik; G. E. Smith; Eric G. Tangalos; C. R. Jack

Objective: To determine whether an fMRI memory encoding task distinguishes among cognitively normal elderly individuals, patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and patients with early Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Methods: Twenty-nine subjects (11 normal, 9 MCI, 9 AD) were studied with an fMRI memory encoding task. A passive sensory task was also performed to assess potential intergroup differences in fMRI responsiveness. Activation in the medial temporal lobe for the memory task and in the anatomic rolandic area for the sensory task was studied. Intergroup comparisons were performed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses. The ROC method provides rigorous control of artifactual false-positive “activation.” Subjects were tested for recall and recognition of the encoding task stimuli following the fMRI study. Results: Medial temporal lobe activation was greater in subjects than MCI and AD patients (p = 0.03 and p = 0.04). There was no difference between AD and MCI patients in normal fMRI memory performance. There was an association between fMRI memory activation (area under the ROC curve) and post-fMRI performance on recognition and free recall. There was no difference among the three groups on the sensory task. Conclusions: MCI and AD patients had less medial temporal lobe activation on the memory task than the normal subjects but similar activation as normal subjects on the sensory task. These findings suggest decreased medial temporal activation may be a specific marker of limbic dysfunction due to the neurodegenerative changes of AD. In addition, fMRI is sufficiently sensitive to detect changes in the prodromal, MCI, phase of the disease.

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