Alzheimer's, ADHD, Autism, Brain Injury Treatment, Mood Disorders New Jersey: The NeuroCognitive and Behavioral Institute » Regional spectral ratios as potential neural markers to identify mild cognitive impairment related to Alzheimer’s disease

Regional spectral ratios as potential neural markers to identify mild cognitive impairment related to Alzheimer’s disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 May 2022
Tien-Wen Lee and Gerald Tramontano

Abstract
Objective:

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has prolonged asymptomatic or mild symptomatic periods. Given that there is an increase in treatment options and that early intervention could modify the disease course, it is desirable to devise biological indices that may differentiate AD and nonAD at mild cognitive impairment (MCI) stage.

Methods:
Based on two well-acknowledged observations of background slowing (attenuation in alpha power and enhancement in theta and delta powers) and early involvement of posterior cingulate cortex (PCC, a neural hub of default-mode network), this study devised novel neural markers, namely, spectral ratios of alpha1 to delta and alpha1 to theta in the PCC.

Read full article: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/acta-neuropsychiatrica/article/abs/regional-spectral-ratios-as-potential-neural-markers-to-identify-mild-cognitive-impairment-related-to-alzheimers-disease/D43A4F93BD112AC534189168B12B3C5C

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