4.5 Article

Improving fMRI in Parkinson's disease by accounting for brain region-specific activity patterns

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NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
卷 38, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103396

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Basal ganglia; Experimental design; fMRI; Motor circuit; Parkinson's disease; Treatment effect

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The study identifies three limitations in using the paradigm of finger tapping and rest with the general linear model (GLM) for motor activity assessment in Parkinson's disease (PD) using functional magnetic imaging (fMRI). The study proposes improvements in the GLM by integrating a kinematic approach and using an event-related design. The findings suggest that these improvements enhance the detection of activations in subcortical structures and capture medication-related effects in the putamen.
In functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) in Parkinson's disease (PD), a paradigm consisting of blocks of finger tapping and rest along with a corresponding general linear model (GLM) is often used to assess motor activity. However, this method has three limitations: (i) Due to the strong magnetic field and the confined environment of the cylindrical bore, it is troublesome to accurately monitor motor output and, therefore, variability in the performed movement is typically ignored. (ii) Given the loss of dopaminergic neurons and ongoing compensa-tory brain mechanisms, motor control is abnormal in PD. Therefore, modeling of patients' tapping with a con-stant amplitude (using a boxcar function) and the expected Parkinsonian motor output are prone to mismatch. (iii) The motor loop involves structures with distinct hemodynamic responses, for which only one type of modeling (e.g., modeling the whole block of finger tapping) may not suffice to capture these structure's temporal activation. The first two limitations call for considering results from online recordings of the real motor output that may lead to significant sensitivity improvements. This was shown in previous work using a non-magnetic glove to capture details of the patients' finger movements in a so-called kinematic approach. For the third limi-tation, modeling motion initiation instead of the whole tapping block has been suggested to account for different temporal activation signatures of the motor loop's structures. In the present study we propose improvements to the GLM as a tool to study motor disorders. For this, we test the robustness of the kinematic approach in an expanded cohort (n = 31), apply more conservative statistics than in previous work, and evaluate the benefits of an event-related model function. Our findings suggest that the integration of the kinematic approach offers a general improvement in detecting activations in subcortical structures, such as the basal ganglia. Additionally, modeling motion initiation using an event-related design yielded superior performance in capturing medication -related effects in the putamen. Our results may guide adaptations in analysis strategies for functional motor studies related to PD and also in more general applications.

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