AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study using brain imaging of 505 Parkinson's patients and 167 healthy participants found that structural brain abnormalities vary by symptom, with apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors, and hallucinations linked to changes in somatomotor and vision areas.
  • * The research suggests that while apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors, and hallucinations may be directly related to damage in motor circuits, anxiety and depression result from a mix of Parkinson’s primary effects and psychosocial factors.

Article Abstract

Neuropsychiatric symptoms (including anxiety, depression, apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors and hallucinations) are among the most common non-motor features of Parkinson's disease. Whether these symptoms should be considered as a direct consequence of the pathophysiologic mechanisms of Parkinson's disease is controversial. Morphometric similarity network analysis and epicenter mapping approach were performed on T1-weighted images of 505 patients with Parkinson's disease and 167 age- and sex-matched healthy participants from Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative database to reveal the commonalities and specificities of distinct neuropsychiatric symptoms. Abnormal cortical co-alteration pattern in patients with neuropsychiatric symptoms was in somatomotor, vision and frontoparietal regions, with epicenters in somatomotor regions. Apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors and hallucinations shares structural abnormalities in somatomotor and vision regions, with epicenters in somatomotor regions. In contrast, the cortical abnormalities and epicenters of anxiety and depression were prominent in the default mode network regions. By embedding each symptom within their co-alteration space, we observed a cluster composed of apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors and hallucinations, while anxiety and depression remained separate. Our findings indicate different structural mechanisms underlie the occurrence and progression of different neuropsychiatric symptoms. Based upon these results, we propose that apathy, impulse-compulsive behaviors and hallucinations are directly related to damage of motor circuit, while anxiety and depression may be the combination effects of primary pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease and psychosocial causes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11364691PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41398-024-03070-zDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neuropsychiatric symptoms
20
parkinson's disease
20
anxiety depression
16
apathy impulse-compulsive
16
impulse-compulsive behaviors
16
behaviors hallucinations
16
somatomotor vision
8
regions epicenters
8
epicenters somatomotor
8
somatomotor regions
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!