4.7 Article

Parkinson's disease and dopaminergic therapy - differential effects on movement, reward and cognition

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 131, Issue -, Pages 2094-2105

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awn112

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; reward; task-shift; fMRI; dopamine

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [G0700503] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Wellcome Trust [077029] Funding Source: Medline
  3. MRC [G0700503] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Medical Research Council [G0700503, G0300723B] Funding Source: researchfish

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Cognitive deficits are very common in Parkinsons disease particularly for executive functions associated with frontal cortico-striatal networks. Previous work has identified deficits in tasks that require attentional control like task-switching, and reward-based tasks like gambling or reversal learning. However, there is a complex relationship between the specific cognitive problems faced by an individual patient, their stage of disease and dopaminergic treatment. We used a bimodality continuous performance task during fMRI to examine how patients with Parkinsons disease represent the prospect of reward and switch between competing task rules accordingly. The task-switch was not separately cued but was based on the implicit reward relevance of spatial and verbal dimensions of successive compound stimuli. Nineteen patients were studied in relative on and off states, induced by dopaminergic medication withdrawal (Hoehn and Yahr stages 1-4). Patients were able to successfully complete the task and establish a bias to one or other dimension in order to gain reward. However the lateral prefrontal cortex and caudate nucleus showed a non-linear U-shape relationship between motor disease severity and regional brain activation. Dopaminergic treatment led to a shift in this U-shape function, supporting the hypothesis of differential neurodegeneration in separate motor and cognitive corticostriatothalamocortical circuits. In addition, anterior cingulate activation associated with reward expectation declined with more severe disease, whereas activation following actual rewards increased with more severe disease. This may facilitate a change in goal-directed behaviours from deferred predicted rewards to immediate actual rewards, particularly when on dopaminergic treatment. We discuss the implications for investigation and optimal treatment of this common condition at different stages of disease.

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