Lay Description
Perfusion SPECT imaging is a type of brain scan that shows how blood flows through different areas of the brain. In conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, this blood flow can change. SPECT scans can sometimes detect these changes before any visible damage appears on other types of scans. This makes them a useful early warning tool that could help doctors start treatment sooner, when it is more likely to be effective.
In Alzheimer’s disease, lower blood flow in areas such as the parietal and temporal lobes is an important sign of the condition. Detecting this early provides doctors with vital information about how the disease is developing and supports more confident diagnosis.
By combining SPECT results with information from other scans and medical records, researchers can better understand how the disease affects different people. This could help doctors group patients more accurately, plan more effective treatments, and diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier.
We also plan to look at people’s wider health information collected over their lifetime. This could help us understand which factors influence the risk of Alzheimer’s, how people respond to treatment, and what their likely outcomes might be.
Our research will use imaging data from the SWASH+ PACS consortium, which includes Salisbury, Southampton, Portsmouth, and the Isle of Wight. In the past year, Hampshire Hospitals (HHFT) has joined the consortium, meaning the work now covers the whole Hampshire and Isle of Wight Integrated Care Board (HIOW ICB) area.
Many patients may come to University Hospital Southampton (UHS) for specialist neurological care but will have had other tests at the partner hospitals. By safely linking this information, we aim to improve how Alzheimer’s disease is detected and predicted. We will begin by working with colleagues at HHFT and hope to expand this approach across other sites in the future.