4.5 Article

Midsagittal corpus callosal thickness and cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 55, 期 7, 页码 1859-1872

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15640

关键词

corpus callosum; dementia; mild cognitive impairment; Parkinson's disease

资金

  1. Hjarnfonden
  2. Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse
  3. Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation [2015.0125]
  4. Parkinson Foundation of Sweden [1280/20]
  5. Regionalt Forskningsstod [2020-0314]
  6. Skane University Hospital Foundation [2020-O000028]
  7. Swedish Alzheimer Foundation [AF-939932]
  8. Swedish federal government under the ALF agreement [2018-Projekt0279]
  9. Vetenskapsradet
  10. Swedish Brain Foundation [FO2019-0326]
  11. Lund University
  12. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation [2017-0383]
  13. Swedish Research Council [2016-00906]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

People diagnosed with Parkinson's disease can experience cognitive impairment and dementia, which may be related to structural changes in the corpus callosum. This study used magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the thickness of the corpus callosum and cortex in Parkinson's disease patients with varying levels of cognitive impairment. The results showed thinning of the callosum in patients with dementia, and a positive correlation between the thickness of the anterior callosum and the thickness of the cortex in patients with mild cognitive impairment.
People diagnosed with Parkinson's disease (PD) can experience significant neuropsychiatric symptoms, including cognitive impairment and dementia, the neuroanatomical substrates of which are not fully characterised. Symptoms associated with cognitive impairment and dementia in PD may relate to direct structural changes to the corpus callosum via primary white matter pathology or as a secondary outcome due to the degeneration of cortical regions. Using magnetic resonance imaging, the corpus callosum can be investigated at the midsagittal plane, where it converges to a contiguous mass and is not intertwined with other tracts. The objective of this project was thus twofold: First, we investigated possible changes in the thickness of the midsagittal callosum and cortex in patients with PD with varying levels of cognitive impairment; and secondly, we investigated the relationship between the thickness of the midsagittal corpus callosum and the thickness of the cortex. Study participants included cognitively unimpaired PD participants (n = 35), PD participants with mild cognitive impairment (n = 22), PD participants with dementia (n = 17) and healthy controls (n = 27). We found thinning of the callosum in PD-related dementia compared with PD-related mild cognitive impairment and cognitively unimpaired PD participants. Regression analyses found thickness of the left medial orbitofrontal cortex to be positively correlated with thickness of the anterior callosum in PD-related mild cognitive impairment. This study suggests that a midsagittal thickness model can uncover changes to the corpus callosum in PD-related dementia, which occur in line with changes to the cortex in this advanced disease stage.

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