Brain network study reveals clues about dementia’s behavior changes

Tau protein buildup in the brain disrupts the salience network that connects multiple brain regions, helping you to react to the outside world and your own thoughts

10:23 AM

Author | Kara Gavin

grey brain with purple dots
In this image displaying a “standard brain” (created by averaging brain scans from hundreds of participants not involved in this study), purple spheres show the locations in the brain linked by what is called the salience network. These interconnected areas are key to our ability to understand and decide how to react to things that are happening around us, and help us process our own thoughts and emotions.

When most people think of dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, they probably think of memory loss first. 

But dementia also changes the way a person behaves, whether it makes them quick to get angry or distressed, causes them to become depressed, anxious or apathetic, or even changes their whole personality. 

Over time, these behavioral changes can disrupt their lives as much as losing their ability to think or remember clearly.

Now, a team of University of Michigan researchers reports new clues about what might be happening in the brains of people experiencing even the earliest signs of dementia-related behavior changes

Using two types of advanced medical imaging to study the brains of 128 people in the early stages of dementia, they show links between one of the brain’s most crucial communication networks, a protein called tau, and the level of behavioral symptoms a person has. 

This goes beyond the role of tau that scientists have already known about in people with more advanced dementia: causing tangled nerve fibers in brain regions involved in thinking and memory. 

The study suggests that tau disrupts the integrity of the brain’s salience network. 

This highway of connections between specific brain regions is key to our ability to understand and decide how to react to things that are happening around us. 

SEE ALSO: Dementia becomes an emergency 1.4 million times a year

It also helps us process our own thoughts and emotions.

The researchers showed that the more a person’s salience network had been disrupted in the presence of tau, the more behavioral changes that person would experience. 

They report their findings in Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association.

While the one-time imaging of these 128 research volunteers can’t show cause and effect, the strong association between tau, salience network disruption and behavior change is intriguing, the team says. 

This is the first study that links the biomarker status of an individual with the dysfunction of this network, and behavioral symptoms, in people on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum."

- Alexandru Iordan, Ph.D.

They call for further study of the potential connection in other populations, and for research to evaluate change over time to explore what might be going on within the pathways of connected brain cells that make up the salience network, and explore how it relates to tau buildup and behavioral changes over the course of years. 

They also hope to test whether they could slow behavioral change in people with early-stage dementia by targeting the salience network with mild electrical current or magnetic fields applied from outside the skull and guided by precise imaging. 

More information about how individuals can learn more about opportunities to take part in their research is here.

The researchers, from the Research Program on Cognition and Neuromodulation Based Interventions (RP-CNBI), are led by Alexandru D. Iordan, Ph.D. and program leader Benjamin M. Hampstead, Ph.D. Both are faculty in the U-M Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry.

Iordan, a neuroscientist who is lead author of the study, said, “What we see is that the presence tau pathology relates to behavioral symptoms not in a direct relationship, but rather through dysfunction of a specific network in the brain — the salience network. The more affected this network is, the more severe the behavioral symptoms.” 

He added, “This is the first study that links the biomarker status of an individual with the dysfunction of this network, and behavioral symptoms, in people on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum.”

Two kinds of brain imaging

The team used functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, to study each volunteer’s brain and trace three different networks that each connect far-flung areas of the brain. 

They used a measure called the network segregation index, to gauge how functionally independent each network was relative to other brain networks.

They combined fMRI findings with results from a battery of neuropsychological tests and behavioral questionnaires the volunteers took. 

They also looked at results from positron emission tomography, or PET, scans that showed whether the person’s brain contained excess tau protein as well as beta amyloid, another Alzheimer’s-related protein.

The salience network was the only one of the three networks whose level of integrity correlated with the presence of tau and the severity of dementia-related behavioral issues. 

The default-mode network appears to be involved as a supporting player. The third network studied, called the frontoparietal network, was not related to behavioral symptoms.

SEE ALSO: What is frontotemporal dementia? A neurologist explains | Michigan Medicine

The study showed that unlike tau, the presence of just amyloid in some volunteers’ brains was not related to issues with the salience network or linked to that person’s level of behavioral symptoms.

Iordan notes that the salience network is also known to be involved in some psychiatric disorders and in frontotemporal dementia, a type of early-onset, rapidly progressing dementia marked mainly by behavioral and personality changes. 

Potential for biomarker use and neuromodulation

Iordan notes that PET scans for tau and amyloid are now used clinically in the diagnosis of dementia, and in managing treatment with new medications that aim to reduce the buildup of amyloid, with the goal of slowing cognitive decline. 

But blood tests that can also detect the presence of tau and amyloid, and use them as biomarkers of dementia risk, have also started to become available.

 Since they’re much less expensive than PET scans, they might also be useful in future studies of tau’s role in behavioral changes too, he says. 

Further research could also help explain and even predict variation in the onset of behavioral changes in people with dementia, and the pace of decline. 

It might also lead to ways to identify people whose behavior changes are their earliest detectable sign of dementia risk, even before cognitive ability changes.

But the most exciting thing to Iordan and his colleagues? 

“Our findings provide us with a functional target for potential intervention,” he said. 

“We will soon be able to see if brain stimulation changes these relationships thanks to a larger study led by Dr. Hampstead that evaluates the effects of different doses of weak electrical currents applied to the brain. This larger study is nearing completion, and we are very excited to see what the results show, so stay tuned!”

Researchers at RP-CNBI, led by Hampstead, use neuropsychological tools, various types of neuroimaging, electrical and magnetic brain stimulation, and rehabilitation techniques to develop and apply non-drug treatments for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias.

Get more information about the group’s work.

Additional authors: In addition to lordan and Hampstead, the study’s authors are Robert Ploutz-Snyder, Ph.D., Bidisha Ghosh, M.A., Annalise Rahman-Filipiak, Ph.D., Robert Koeppe, Ph.D., Scott Peltier, Ph.D., Bruno Giordani, Ph.D., and Roger L. Albin, M.D. Hampstead is the clinical core lead at the Michigan Alzheimer’s Disease Center, of which several other authors are members.

Funding: The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Aging (R01AG058724, R35AG072262; P30AG072931) and the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund. This content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute on Aging.

Paper cited: “Salience network segregation mediates the effect of tau pathology on mild behavioral impairment,” Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association. DOI: 10.1002/alz.14229

Sign up for Health Lab newsletters today. Get medical tips from top experts and learn about new scientific discoveries every week.

Sign up for the Health Lab Podcast. Add us wherever you listen to your favorite shows. 


More Articles About: Alzheimer's Disease Dementia Behavioral Health Neurological (Brain) Conditions Geriatric Psychiatric Treatment All Research Topics Basic Science and Laboratory Research Neuroscience
Health Lab word mark overlaying blue cells
Health Lab

Explore a variety of health care news & stories by visiting the Health Lab home page for more articles.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

In This Story
user Alexandru D Iordan

Assistant Professor

Benjamin Hampstead, PhD, ABPP/CN Benjamin Hampstead

Professor

Stay Informed

Want top health & research news weekly? Sign up for Health Lab’s newsletters today!

Subscribe
Featured News & Stories young woman standing on her own smiling outside
Health Lab
“Miracle Maddy” pursues high school diploma after complex brain surgery for extremely rare epilepsy
Six years after brain surgery for rare epilepsy Rasmussen’s encephalitis that caused rapid brain deterioration, high school senior is seizure free and planning to pursue nursing.
pigs sick and chickens in background with blue background and green cells floating around
Health Lab
Why the bird flu’s jump to pigs is concerning
A Michigan Medicine virologist speaks about the implications of H5N1 influenza, or bird flu, and whether a new pandemic could be on the horizon.
surgeon close up operating in bright lighted room
Health Lab
In 10 seconds, AI model detects cancerous brain tumor often missed during surgery
Researchers have developed an AI powered model that — in 10 seconds — can determine during surgery if any part of a cancerous brain tumor that could be removed remains, a study published in Nature suggests.
family of four sitting on couch in living room looking at an ipad laughing
Health Lab
Grandparents help grandkids in many ways – but the reverse may be true too
A poll shows the many ways (childcare, nutrition, major expenses) that grandparents help their grandchildren, but also suggests a link to older adults’ sense of isolation and their mental health.
Minding Memory with a microphone and a shadow of a microphone on a blue background
Minding Memory
Can a personalized music intervention reduce behavioral disturbances in dementia?
While memory loss is generally thought of as the hallmark of dementia, behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia like agitation, aggression, anxiety, and hallucinations are nearly universal, affecting almost all patients with advanced dementia. These behavioral disturbances are often the trigger for nursing home placement, and they can be highly distressing for both patients and their care partners. In today’s episode, Matt and Lauren speak with Dr. Ellen McCreedy, a researcher from the Brown School of Public Health who has conducted a study of personalized music intervention called Music & Memory for people living with dementia in nursing homes. Dr. McCreedy is a gerontologist and health services researcher who focuses on evaluation of non-pharmacologic interventions for managing behavioral disturbances of people living with dementia.
cell formation in grey and then two circles highlighed blue and one red
Health Lab
The solution to death from a fentanyl overdose could lie in its chemical structure
University of Michigan researchers may have found that the solution to prevent people from dying from a fentanyl overdose may be found within fentanyl's own chemistry.