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White matter microstructures in Parkinson's disease with and without impulse control behaviors. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Impulse control behaviors (ICBs) in Parkinson's disease (PD) may stem from excessive dopaminergic therapy or increased sensitivity in the ventral striatum, with brain network changes also playing a role.
  • The study examined white matter microstructures in PD patients with and without ICBs using advanced imaging techniques, comparing them to healthy controls.
  • Results showed that while PD patients without ICBs had significant alterations in white matter tracts, those with ICBs displayed only minor changes, suggesting that issues in the reward system and emotional recognition areas are more pronounced in PD patients without ICBs.

Article Abstract

Background: Impulse control behaviors (ICBs) in Parkinson's disease (PD) are thought to be caused by an overdose of dopaminergic therapy in the relatively spared ventral striatum, or by hypersensitivity of this region to dopamine. Alterations in brain networks are now also thought to contribute to the development of ICBs.

Objective: To comprehensively assess white matter microstructures in PD patients with ICBs using advanced diffusion MRI and magnetization transfer saturation (MT-sat) imaging.

Methods: This study included 19 PD patients with ICBs (PD-ICBs), 18 PD patients without ICBs (PD-nICBs), and 20 healthy controls (HCs). Indices of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), diffusion kurtosis imaging, neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging, and MT-sat imaging were evaluated using tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS), regions of interest (ROIs), and tract-specific analysis (TSA).

Results: Compared with HCs, PD-nICBs had significant alterations in many major white matter tracts in most parameters. In contrast, PD-ICBs had only partial changes in several parameters. Compared with PD-ICBs, TBSS, ROI, and TSA analyses revealed that PD-nICBs had lower axial kurtosis, myelin volume fraction, and orientation dispersion index in the uncinate fasciculus and external capsule, as well as in the retrolenticular part of the internal capsule. These are components of the reward system and the visual and emotional perception areas, respectively.

Interpretation: Myelin and axonal changes in fibers related to the reward system and visual emotional recognition might be more prominent in PD-nICBs than in PD-ICBs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8935280PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acn3.51504DOI Listing

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