Cerebellar dysfunction in frontotemporal dementia: intra-cerebellar pathology and cerebellar network degeneration.

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Neurology Pub Date : 2025-03-25 DOI:10.1007/s00415-025-13046-8
Jana Kleinerova, Marlene Tahedl, Mary Clare McKenna, Angela Garcia-Gallardo, Siobhan Hutchinson, Orla Hardiman, Cédric Raoul, Fabrice Ango, Bernard Schneider, Pierre-Francois Pradat, Ee Ling Tan, Peter Bede
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Abstract

Background: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) share overlapping clinical, genetic, and neuroimaging features; a spectrum of conditions commonly referred to as the ALS-FTD continuum. The majority of imaging studies focus on supratentorial pathology, and phenotype-defining motor, cognitive, and behavioural profiles are often exclusively attributed to supratentorial degeneration overlooking the contribution of cerebellar pathology.

Methods: A multimodal neuroimaging study was conducted to evaluate phenotype-associated cerebello-cerebral connectivity profiles in ALS-FTD, behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), non-fluent variant (nfvPPA), and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA). Structural connectivity, functional connectivity, and volumetric analyses were conducted.

Results: Radial diffusivity analyses detected impaired bilateral cerebello-frontal, cerebello-parietal, and cerebello-temporal connectivity in all study groups along the ALS-FTD spectrum. Cerebello-occipital disconnection was captured in ALS-FTD and nfvPPA. Spinocerebellar disconnection was detected in C9orf72 negative ALS-FTD and nfvPPA. C9orf72 positive ALS-FTD patients exhibited both anterior and posterior lobe cerebellar volume loss, while bvFTD and nfvPPA patients showed posterior cerebellar atrophy. Flocculonodular degeneration was observed in nfvPPA and cerebellar crura atrophy in bvFTD. Bilateral corticospinal tract and corpus callosum degeneration was detected in ALS-FTD, bvFTD, and nfvPPA. Primary motor cortex volume reductions were captured in both ALS-FTD and nfvPPA.

Conclusions: Our analyses capture significant cerebro-cerebellar disconnection in frontotemporal dementia. Corticospinal tract and motor cortex degeneration can be readily detected in non-ALS phenotypes. Intra-cerebellar pathology, coupled with the degeneration of cerebellar projections and the ensuing dysfunction of cerebro-cerebellar networks likely contribute to phenotype-defining clinical profiles in frontotemporal dementia. Infratentorial disease burden and cerebellar network dysfunction should, therefore, be carefully considered in FTD, and phenotype-defining neuropsychological profiles should not be solely attributed to supratentorial degeneration.

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额颞叶痴呆的小脑功能障碍:小脑内病理和小脑网络变性。
背景:肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)和额颞叶痴呆(FTD)具有重叠的临床、遗传和神经影像学特征;通常被称为ALS-FTD连续体的一系列病症。大多数影像学研究集中在幕上病理学上,而定义表型的运动、认知和行为特征通常只归因于幕上变性,而忽视了小脑病理学的贡献。方法:通过一项多模式神经影像学研究来评估ALS-FTD、行为变异性额颞叶痴呆(bvFTD)、非流畅变异性(nfvPPA)和语义变异性原发性进行性失语症(svPPA)中与表型相关的小脑-大脑连通性特征。进行了结构连通性、功能连通性和体积分析。结果:径向扩散分析发现,在ALS-FTD谱上,所有研究组的双侧小脑-额叶、小脑-顶叶和小脑-颞叶连通性受损。ALS-FTD和nfvPPA表现为小脑-枕断连。在C9orf72阴性ALS-FTD和nfvPPA中检测到脊髓小脑断开。C9orf72阳性ALS-FTD患者表现为小脑前后叶体积损失,而bvFTD和nfvPPA患者表现为小脑后叶萎缩。nfvPPA出现絮状结节变性,bvFTD出现小脑脚萎缩。ALS-FTD、bvFTD和nfvPPA均可见双侧皮质脊髓束和胼胝体变性。ALS-FTD和nfvPPA均发现原发性运动皮质体积减少。结论:我们的分析捕捉到了额颞叶痴呆患者显著的脑小脑分离。皮质脊髓束和运动皮质变性可以很容易地检测到非als表型。小脑内病理,加上小脑投影的退化和随后的脑小脑网络功能障碍,可能有助于表型定义额颞叶痴呆的临床特征。因此,在FTD中应仔细考虑幕下疾病负担和小脑网络功能障碍,并且定义表型的神经心理学特征不应仅归因于幕上变性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neurology
Journal of Neurology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
5.00%
发文量
558
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurology is an international peer-reviewed journal which provides a source for publishing original communications and reviews on clinical neurology covering the whole field. In addition, Letters to the Editors serve as a forum for clinical cases and the exchange of ideas which highlight important new findings. A section on Neurological progress serves to summarise the major findings in certain fields of neurology. Commentaries on new developments in clinical neuroscience, which may be commissioned or submitted, are published as editorials. Every neurologist interested in the current diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders needs access to the information contained in this valuable journal.
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