4.6 Article

Emergent Functional Network Effects in Parkinson Disease

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 29, Issue 6, Pages 2509-2523

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhy121

Keywords

fMRI; functional connectivity; networks; Parkinson disease

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke [NS075321, NS097437, NS41509, 1P30NS098577, F32NS092290]
  2. National Institute of Aging [AG054405]
  3. National Institute of Mental Health [K01MH104592]
  4. American Parkinson Disease Association (APDA) Advanced Research Center at Washington University
  5. St. Louis Chapter of the APDA, Parkinson Study Group
  6. Parkinson's disease Foundation Mentored Clinical Research Award
  7. American Academy of Neurology
  8. American Brain Foundation Clinical Research Training Fellowship - Abbvie
  9. Jo Oertli Fund
  10. Washington University Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences
  11. Barnes Jewish Hospital Foundation (Elliot Stein Family Fund & Parkinson disease research Fund)

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The hallmark pathology underlying Parkinson disease (PD) is progressive synucleinopathy, beginning in caudal brainstem that later spreads rostrally. However, the primarily subcortical pathology fails to account for the wide spectrum of clinical manifestations in PD. To reconcile these observations, resting-state functional connectivity (FC) can be used to examine dysfunction across distributed brain networks. We measured FC in a large, single-site study of nondemented PD (N = 107; OFF medications) and healthy controls (N = 46) incorporating rigorous quality control measures and comprehensive sampling of cortical, subcortical and cerebellar regions. We employed novel statistical approaches to determine group differences across the entire connectome, at the network-level, and for select brain regions. Group differences respected well-characterized network delineations producing a striking block-wise pattern of network-to-network effects. Surprisingly, these results demonstrate that the greatest FC differences involve sensorimotor, thalamic, and cerebellar networks, with notably smaller striatal effects. Split-half replication demonstrates the robustness of these results. Finally, block-wise FC correlations with behavior suggest that FC disruptions may contribute to clinical manifestations in PD. Overall, these results indicate a concerted breakdown of functional network interactions, remote from primary pathophysiology, and suggest that FC deficits in PD are related to emergent network-level phenomena rather than focal pathology.

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