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Original article / research

2021
Year :2021 Month : March-April Volume : 10 Issue : 2 Page : RO01 - RO05

Correlation of Neurocortical Atrophy Scores on Imaging with Mini-Mental Status Examination

Published: April 1, 2021 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2021/45463.2618
Correspondence Address :
Kirthan Chatra, Soujanya Mynalli, Anston Vernon Braggs,
Soujanya Mynalli,
Senior Resident, Department of Radiodiagnosis, Father Muller Medical College,
Mangalore-575002, Karnataka, India.
E-mail: soju.mynalli@gmail.com
Introduction: Introduction: The term “Cognitive impairment” is used for decline of memory and behaviour, depicting its progressive nature, of which the most common cause is Alzheimer’s followed by vascular injury. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) together have an established role to identify aetiology and also to distinguish normal ageing from demented patients. Final diagnosis by brain biopsy is an invasive method, hence structural MRI scores are used to differentiate and characterise the course and prognosis of disease.

Aim: This study was done to correlate the various imaging scores of dementia like Schelten’s, Davies-Mattis-Kipps, Fazekas, Pasquier and Koedam scores with the severity of cognitive impairment on MMSE scores.

Materials and Methods: It was a cross-sectional study done on 100 patients based on purposive sampling techniques of exclusion and inclusion criteria. All patients above 18 years of age referred for the evaluation of cognitive impairment were included after taking informed and written consent. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Brain was performed using a 1.5 T MRI scanner (PHILIPS ACHIEVA 16 channel system) as per the department protocol. The axis was taken perpendicular to long axis of hippocampus on sagittal, and perpendicular to the commissures intersecting the mamillary bodies on coronal. The MMSE and lobar cortical atrophy scores (Schelten’s, Davies-Mattis-Kipps, Fazekas, Pasquier and Koedam) were recorded for each patient and imaging diagnosis was made. The data was then analysed for statistics. Frequency percentage distribution of range of MMSE, Pearson Coefficient of Correlation and Fisher’s exact test, Chi-squared Test and Sig. (2-tailed) correlation were used. Statistical measurement was done using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS), version 21.

Results: There was statistically significant association (p<0.05) between Schelten’s and Mattis imaging scores with MMSE. This determines that there exists relationship between degree of cognitive impairment and neurodegeneration predominantly temporal lobe. However, linear coefficient of correlation (r>0.3) was noted between MMSE severity and Schelten’s, Davies-Mattis-Kipps and Fazekas grading. This determines that there is a moderately positive linear relationship between the two variables.

Conclusion: MRI Brain is the investigation of choice in patients with cognitive impairment to categorise the patients based on aetiology and stage the disease that could be misdiagnosed on clinical assessment alone. MRI also diagnoses stage of dementia that affects the prognosis and outcome of the patient. Patients with cognitive impairment irrespective of MMSE score severity need to undergo neuroimaging that helps in improvising patient management at the earliest.
 
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