The Role of PET Imaging in Patients with Prion Disease: A Literature Review

AbstractPrion diseases are rare, rapidly progressive, and fatal incurable degenerative brain disorders caused by the misfolding of a normal protein called PrPC into an abnormal protein called PrPSc. Their highly variable clinical presentation mimics various degenerative and non-degenerative brain disorders, making diagnosis a significant challenge for neurologists. Currently, definitive diagnosis relies on post-mortem examination of nervous tissue to detect the pathogenic prion protein. The current diagnostic criteria are limited. While structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) remains the gold standard imaging modality for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) diagnosis, positron emission tomography (PET) using18fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) and other radiotracers have demonstrated promising potential in the diagnostic assessment of prion disease. In this context, a comprehensive and updated review exclusively focused on PET imaging in prion diseases is still lacking. We review the current value of PET imaging with18F-FDG and non-FDG tracers in the diagnostic management of prion diseases. From the collected data,18F-FDG PET mainly reveals cortical and subcortical hypometabolic areas in prion disease, although fails to identify typical pattern or laterality abnormalities to differentiate between genetic and sporadic prion diseases. Although the rarity of prion diseases limits the establishment of a definitive hypometabolism pattern, this review reveals some more prevalent...
Source: Molecular Imaging and Biology - Category: Molecular Biology Source Type: research