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Distinct neural circuits are associated with subclinical neuropsychiatric symptoms in Parkinson's disease

Yazar
Sezgin, Mine
Sinha, Rajita
Kamel, Sarageldin
Aravala, Sai
Elfil, Mohamed
Tınaz, Sule
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Özet
son's disease (PD) can present with neuropsychiatric symptoms (here, anxiety, depression, and apathy) at any stage of the disease. We investigated the neural correlates of subclinical neuropsychiatric symptoms in relation to motor and cognitive symptoms in a high-functioning PD cohort.Methods:Brain morphometry of the cognitively intact, early-stage (Hoehn & Yahr 2) PD group (n = 48) was compared to matched controls (n = 37). Whole-brain, pairwise, resting-state functional connectivity measures were correlated with neuropsychiatric symptom, motor exam, and global cognitive scores of the PD group.Results:Factor analysis of highly collinear anxiety, depression, and apathy scores revealed a single principal component (i.e., composite neuropsychiatric symptom score) explaining 71.6% of variance. There was no collinearity between the neuropsychiatric, motor, and cognitive scores. Compared to controls, PD group showed only subcortical changes including amygdala and nucleus accumbens atrophy, and greater pallidal volume. Reduced functional connectivity in the limbic cortical-striatal circuits and increased functional connectivity between the cerebellum and occipito-temporal regions were associated with a more impaired neuropsychiatric profile. This functional connectivity pattern was distinct from those associated with motor deficits and global cognitive functioning. The individual components of the neuropsychiatric symptoms also exhibited unique connectivity patterns.Limitations:Patients were scanned in "on-medication" state only and a control group with similar neuropsychiatric symptoms was not included.Conclusion:Abnormal functional connectivity of distinct neural circuits is present even at the subclinical stage of neuropsychiatric symptoms in PD. Neuropsychiatric phenotyping is important and may facilitate early interventions to "reorganize" these circuits and delay/prevent clinical symptom onset.Keywords:Functional connectivity; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nonmotor symptoms; Parkinson's disease; Resting-state.
Bağlantı
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/1553
https://www.jns-journal.com/article/S0022-510X(21)00058-7/fulltext#secst0005
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2021.117365
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