Hippocampus and olfactory impairment in Parkinson disease: a comparative exploratory combined volumetric/functional MRI study.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neuroradiology Pub Date : 2024-07-24 DOI:10.1007/s00234-024-03436-6
Michele Porcu, Luigi Cocco, Francesco Marrosu, Riccardo Cau, Josep Puig, Jasjit S Suri, Luca Saba
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Abstract

Introduction: Patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD) commonly experience Olfactory Dysfunction (OD). Our exploratory study examined hippocampal volumetric and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) variations in a Healthy Control (HC) group versus a cognitively normal PD group, further categorized into PD with No/Mild Hyposmia (PD-N/MH) and PD with Severe Hyposmia (PD-SH).

Methods: We calculated participants' relative Total Hippocampal Volume (rTHV) and performed Spearman's partial correlations, controlled for age and gender, to examine the correlation between rTHV and olfactory performance assessed by the Odor Stick Identification Test for the Japanese (OSIT-J) score. Mann-Whitney U tests assessed rTHV differences across groups and subgroups, rejecting the null hypothesis for p < 0.05. Furthermore, a seed-based rs-fMRI analysis compared hippocampal connectivity differences using a one-way ANCOVA covariate model with controls for age and gender.

Results: Spearman's partial correlations indicated a moderate positive correlation between rTHV and OSIT-J in the whole study population (ρ = 0.406; p = 0.007), PD group (ρ = 0.493; p = 0.008), and PD-N/MH subgroup (ρ = 0.617; p = 0.025). Mann-Whitney U tests demonstrated lower rTHV in PD-SH subgroup compared to both HC group (p = 0.013) and PD-N/MH subgroup (p = 0.029). Seed-to-voxel rsfMRI analysis revealed reduced hippocampal connectivity in PD-SH subjects compared to HC subjects with a single cluster of voxels.

Conclusions: Although the design of the study do not allow to make firm conclusions, it is reasonable to speculate that the progressive involvement of the hippocampus in PD patients is associated with the progression of OD.

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帕金森病患者的海马体和嗅觉障碍:容积/功能联合磁共振成像对比探索性研究。
简介:帕金森病(PD)患者通常会出现嗅觉功能障碍(OD)。我们的探索性研究检测了健康对照组(HC)与认知正常的帕金森病组(进一步分为无/轻度嗅觉减退的帕金森病组(PD-N/MH)和严重嗅觉减退的帕金森病组(PD-SH))的海马体积和静息态功能磁共振成像(rs-fMRI)变化:我们计算了参与者的海马体相对总体积(rTHV),并在控制年龄和性别的情况下进行了斯皮尔曼偏相关分析,以研究rTHV与日本人气味棒识别测试(OSIT-J)得分所评估的嗅觉能力之间的相关性。Mann-Whitney U 检验评估了各组和亚组之间的 rTHV 差异,拒绝 p 结果的 null 假设:斯皮尔曼偏相关表明,在整个研究人群(ρ = 0.406; p = 0.007)、PD 组(ρ = 0.493; p = 0.008)和 PD-N/MH 亚组(ρ = 0.617; p = 0.025)中,rTHV 与 OSIT-J 呈中度正相关。Mann-Whitney U 检验表明,与 HC 组(p = 0.013)和 PD-N/MH 亚组(p = 0.029)相比,PD-SH 亚组的 rTHV 较低。种子到体素的rsfMRI分析显示,与HC受试者相比,PD-SH受试者的海马连接性降低,只有一个体素群:尽管研究设计不允许做出肯定的结论,但我们有理由推测,帕金森病患者海马的进行性受累与 OD 的进展有关。
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来源期刊
Neuroradiology
Neuroradiology 医学-核医学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.60%
发文量
214
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Neuroradiology aims to provide state-of-the-art medical and scientific information in the fields of Neuroradiology, Neurosciences, Neurology, Psychiatry, Neurosurgery, and related medical specialities. Neuroradiology as the official Journal of the European Society of Neuroradiology receives submissions from all parts of the world and publishes peer-reviewed original research, comprehensive reviews, educational papers, opinion papers, and short reports on exceptional clinical observations and new technical developments in the field of Neuroimaging and Neurointervention. The journal has subsections for Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology, Advanced Neuroimaging, Paediatric Neuroradiology, Head-Neck-ENT Radiology, Spine Neuroradiology, and for submissions from Japan. Neuroradiology aims to provide new knowledge about and insights into the function and pathology of the human nervous system that may help to better diagnose and treat nervous system diseases. Neuroradiology is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and follows the COPE core practices. Neuroradiology prefers articles that are free of bias, self-critical regarding limitations, transparent and clear in describing study participants, methods, and statistics, and short in presenting results. Before peer-review all submissions are automatically checked by iThenticate to assess for potential overlap in prior publication.
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