4.8 Article

A Network Diffusion Model of Disease Progression in Dementia

Journal

NEURON
Volume 73, Issue 6, Pages 1204-1215

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2011.12.040

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS075425, F32 EB012404-01, P41 RR023953-02, P41 RR023953-02S1, R21 EB008138-02]

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Patterns of dementia are known to fall into dissociated but dispersed brain networks, suggesting that the disease is transmitted along neuronal pathways rather than by proximity. This view is supported by neuropathological evidence for prion-like transsynaptic transmission of disease agents like misfolded tau and beta amyloid. We mathematically model this transmission by a diffusive mechanism mediated by the brain's connectivity network obtained from tractography of 14 healthy-brain MRIs. Subsequent graph theoretic analysis provides a fully quantitative, testable, predictive model of dementia. Specifically, we predict spatially distinct persistent modes, which, we found, recapitulate known patterns of dementia and match recent reports of selectively vulnerable dissociated brain networks. Model predictions also closely match T1-weighted MRI volumetrics of 18 Alzheimer's and 18 frontotemporal dementia subjects. Prevalence rates predicted by the model strongly agree with published data. This work has many important implications, including dimensionality reduction, differential diagnosis, and especially prediction of future atrophy using baseline MRI morphometrics.

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