- Montagne, Axel;
- Huuskonen, Mikko T;
- Rajagopal, Gautham;
- Sweeney, Melanie D;
- Nation, Daniel A;
- Sepehrband, Farshid;
- D'Orazio, Lina M;
- Harrington, Michael G;
- Chui, Helena C;
- Law, Meng;
- Toga, Arthur W;
- Zlokovic, Berislav V
Introduction
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown is an early independent biomarker of human cognitive dysfunction, as found using gadolinium (Gd) as a contrast agent. Whether Gd accumulates in brains of individuals with an age-dependent BBB breakdown and/or mild cognitive impairment remains unclear.Methods
We analyzed T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans from 52 older participants with BBB breakdown in the hippocampus 19-28 months after either cyclic or linear Gd agent.Results
There was no change in T1-weighted signal intensity between the baseline contrast MRI and unenhanced MRI on re-examination in any of the studied 10 brain regions with either Gd agent suggesting undetectable Gd brain retention.Discussion
Gd does not accumulate in brains of older individuals with a BBB breakdown in the hippocampus. Thus, Gd agents can be used without risk of brain retention within a ∼2-year follow-up to study BBB in the aging human brain in relation to cognition and/or other pathologies.