Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) is an advanced magnetic resonance imaging technique that measures the diffusion of water molecules in tissue, providing microstructural information about white matter integrity. In neurodegeneration, DTI detects subtle white matter damage before it becomes apparent on conventional MRI, making it valuable for early diagnosis and disease progression monitoring.
DTI exploits the fact that water molecules diffuse more readily along axonal fibers than across them due to barriers including myelin sheaths, axonal membranes, and intracellular organelles. This anisotropic (direction-dependent) diffusion provides information about white matter microstructure.
| Parameter |
Description |
Clinical Significance |
| FA (Fractional Anisotropy) |
Degree of directional diffusion |
Reduced in white matter damage |
| MD (Mean Diffusivity) |
Average diffusion rate |
Increased in neurodegeneration |
| Axial Diffusivity (AD) |
Diffusion along principal axis |
Axonal damage marker |
| Radial Diffusivity (RD) |
Diffusion perpendicular to principal axis |
Myelin damage marker |
- Hippocampal connectivity: Reduced FA in temporal lobe white matter
- Default mode network: Disruption of posterior cingulate connectivity
- Biomarker potential: DTI changes precede clinical symptoms
- Substantia nigra: Reduced FA in the nigrosomal zone
- White matter tracts: Progressive damage in pontocerebellar and frontal pathways
- Diffusion changes: May differentiate PD from atypical parkinsonism
- Corticospinal tract: Characteristic increased RD and decreased FA
- Corpus callosum: Interhemispheric disconnection
- Motor cortex: Reduced FA even in pre-symptomatic carriers
- Frontal white matter: Early FA reduction
- Temporal connections: Disruption of uncinate fasciculus
- Disease subtyping: Different patterns for bvFTD vs. semantic variant
¶ Corticobasal Degeneration and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
DTI has emerged as a valuable tool for detecting the characteristic white matter abnormalities in 4R tauopathies including CBD and PSP.
- Asymmetric white matter damage: More severe FA reduction in the hemisphere contralateral to the most affected clinical side
- Superior longitudinal fasciculus: Early involvement with reduced FA and increased RD
- Corpus callosum: Interhemispheric disconnection, particularly in the posterior sections
- Corticospinal tract: Variable involvement depending on motor phenotype
- Frontal white matter: Early changes reflecting cortical involvement
- Midbrain: Characteristic "hummingbird sign" on conventional MRI, with DTI showing reduced FA in crus cerebri and cerebral peduncles
- Superior cerebellar peduncle: Increased MD and RD, differentiating PSP from PD
- Globus pallidus: Elevated MD reflecting iron accumulation and neurodegeneration
- Thalamic connections: Disruption of thalamo-cortical pathways
- Brainstem: Widespread white matter changes including pontocerebellar fibers
| Region |
CBD |
PSP |
Sensitivity |
| Superior cerebellar peduncle |
Variable |
Markedly reduced FA |
75% |
| Midbrain |
Moderate changes |
Severe reduction |
80% |
| Corpus callosum |
Asymmetric |
Symmetric |
65% |
| Frontal white matter |
Severe |
Moderate |
70% |
- Differential diagnosis: Helps distinguish CBD from PSP and PD
- Disease progression: Quantitative measurement of white matter degeneration
- Biomarker development: Potential endpoint for clinical trials
- Prognostic indicators: Baseline DTI metrics predict clinical decline
- Region-of-interest analysis: Focus on brainstem and basal ganglia regions
- Tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS): Whole-brain approach for detecting subtle changes
- Free water imaging: Separates cellular changes from extracellular alterations
- Longitudinal monitoring: Sensitive to change over 6-12 month intervals
- Detects microstructural changes before atrophy becomes evident
- Enables identification of at-risk individuals
- May facilitate earlier therapeutic intervention
- Differentiates Parkinson's disease from progressive supranuclear palsy
- Distinguishes ALS from mimic disorders
- Helps differentiate dementia subtypes
- Quantitative tracking of white matter degeneration
- Surrogate marker for clinical trials
- Objective measure of treatment response
- b-values: Typically 1000-2000 s/mm²
- Directions: Minimum 30-60 directions recommended
- Resolution: 2mm isotropic preferred
- Sensitivity to motion artifacts
- Complex interpretation in crossing fiber regions
- Requires specialized expertise for analysis
- Limited standardization across scanners
- Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging (NODDI): Separates neurite density from dispersion
- Q-ball Imaging: Resolves crossing fibers
- Diffusion Spectrum Imaging: Higher angular resolution
- Combined with PET and CSF biomarkers
- Machine learning for automated analysis
- Multi-modal diagnostic algorithms