Keywords: Novel Contrast Mechanisms, Alzheimer's Disease, Blood-brain barrier
Motivation: Pneumonia is more prevalent in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) patients than in healthy elderly people, which may be due to blood-brain barrier (BBB) vulnerability.
Goal(s): We assess whether filter exchange imaging (FEXI) can be used to understand the comorbid mechanisms occurring at the BBB with pneumonia and AD.
Approach: We apply the FEXI technique to a TgF344-AD rat model of AD with induced Streptococcus pneumoniae lung infection.
Results: FEXI detects significantly higher BBB water exchange in infected rats, with greater increase in the AD group, which significantly correlates to upregulation of hippocampus aquaporin-4 water channels, demonstrating the sensitivity of non-invasive FEXI to BBB alterations.
Impact: This work could be translated to a clinical study using filter exchange imaging to assess whether Alzheimer’s Disease patients suffering with pneumonia also exhibit worse blood-brain barrier alterations than patients without pneumonia and healthy elderly people.
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