Practical Geriatrics ›› 2026, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (2): 164-168.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1003-9198.2026.02.012

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Application of amide proton transfer magnetic resonance imaging in early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease

LUO Jing, ZHANG Yufeng, GAO Xiaolong, GU Guojun   

  1. Department of Radiology, Luodian Hospital, Baoshan District, Shanghai 201908, China (LUO Jing, ZHANG Yufeng, GAO Xiaolong);
    Department of Radiology, Renji Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200127, China (GU Guojun)
  • Received:2025-08-10 Online:2026-02-20 Published:2026-02-27
  • Contact: GU Guojun, Email: gu8002@163.com

Abstract: Objective To explore the application value of amide proton transfer (APT) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Methods A total of 22 AD patients (AD group), 25 patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI group), and 20 age- and gender-matched healthy controls (NC group) were prospectively enrolled. All subjects underwent routine cranial MRI structural imaging and hippocampal APT imaging. The amide proton (3.5 ppm) asymmetry magnetization transfer rate (MTRasym) of bilateral hippocampi and temporal cortices was measured on oblique axial APT images. One-way analysis of variance was used to compare MTRasym(3.5 ppm) among the three groups. The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) was administered to all subjects, and partial correlation analysis was performed to evaluate the correlation between hippocampal MTRasym(3.5 ppm) and MMSE score, with age and educational duration as control variables. Results The level of MTRasym(3.5 ppm) of bilateral hippocampi increased sequentially in the NC, MCI, and AD groups: left hippocampus 0.84±0.26, 1.12±0.24, 1.56±0.31 (F=15.463, P<0.001), right hippocampus 0.86±0.17, 1.16±0.26, 1.51±0.21 (F=17.221, P<0.001). No significant interhemispheric differences of MTRasym(3.5 ppm) of bilateral hippocampi and temporal cortex were observed within each group (P>0.05). No significant differences in bilateral temporal cortex MTRasym(3.5 ppm) were found among the three groups (P>0.05). MTRasym(3.5 ppm) of bilateral hippocampi were negatively correlated with MMSE scores (left: r=-0.627, P<0.001; right: r=-0.614, P<0.001). Conclusions APT imaging can quantify hippocampal metabolic abnormalities, and its MTRasym(3.5 ppm) is significantly correlated with AD progression and cognitive function, demonstrating clinical value for early AD diagnosis and disease monitoring.    

Key words: amide proton transfer, Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment, hippocampus, temporal cortex

CLC Number: