Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 positron emission tomography in progressive apraxia of speech and primary progressive aphasia variants

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Abstract

Objectives: To determine patterns of hypometabolism on fluorodeoxyglucose F18 positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in patients with progressive apraxia of speech (PAS) and primary progressive aphasia (PPA) variants and to use these patterns to further refine current classification. Design: We identified all patients who had FDG-PET and PAS or PPA who were evaluated by an expert speech-language pathologist. Patterns of hypometabolism were independently classified by 2 raters blinded to clinical data. Three speech-language pathologists reclassified all patients into 1 of 7 operationally defined categories of PAS and PPA blinded to FDG-PET data. Setting: Tertiary care medical center. Patients: Twenty-four patients with PAS or PPA and FDG-PET. Main Outcome Measure: Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 PET hypometabolic pattern. Results: Of the 24 patients in the study, 9 had nonfluent speech output; 14, fluent speech; and 1 was unclassifiable. Twenty-one patients showed FDG hypometabolism; the remaining 3 did not. Among the patients showing hypometabolism, 8 had a prerolandic pattern of which 7 had nonfluent speech including progressive nonfluent aphasia (n=3), PAS (n=1), and mixed nonfluent aphasia/ apraxia of speech (n=3); the other patient had PPA unclassifiable. The remaining 13 had a postrolandic pattern, all with fluent speech (P

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Josephs, K. A., Duffy, J. R., Fossett, T. R., Strand, E. A., Claassen, D. O., Whitwell, J. L., & Peller, P. J. (2010). Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 positron emission tomography in progressive apraxia of speech and primary progressive aphasia variants. Archives of Neurology, 67(5), 596–605. https://doi.org/10.1001/archneurol.2010.78

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