眼下核在亨廷顿症和帕金森症中显示出相反的功能连接模式

Stefania Evangelisti, Sirius Boessenkool, Chris Patrick Pflanz, Romina Basting, Jill F Betts, Mark Jenkinson, Stuart Clare, K. Muhammed, Campbell LeHeron, Richard Armstrong, Johannes C Klein, Masud Husain, Andrea H Nemeth, Michele T Hu, G. Douaud
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摘要

亨廷顿病和帕金森病是两种运动障碍,主要代表基底节区抑制功能的相反状态。尽管丘脑下核是皮质-皮质下-皮质回路的一个组成部分,但人们仅通过对亨廷顿氏病和帕金森病的侵入性研究,对其功能进行了详细的研究,以分离其信号。在这里,我们测试了丘脑下核在早期亨廷顿病和帕金森病中是否表现出相反的功能特征。我们在同一项全脑成像研究中纳入了这两种运动障碍,并利用超高场7T MRI获得了研究基底节区最小核所需的非常精细的分辨率。12名亨廷顿氏病携带者中有11名在症状前阶段被招募,而18名帕金森病患者中有16名仅表现出单侧运动症状(15名处于Hoehn和Yahr的I期停药)。我们对24名健康对照进行了组间比较相互作用分析,结果显示,亨廷顿氏病和帕金森病对感觉运动网络中丘脑下核其余部分功能连通性的影响存在差异,即与各自年龄匹配的健康对照组相比,其影响相反。这种对丘脑底核的不同影响包括一个与帕金森病中深部脑刺激“最佳点”(整体效果最大的区域)精确对应的区域。重要的是,在这两种疾病中,丘脑下核偏离对照静息状态值的严重程度与运动和认知症状的严重程度有关,尽管每种疾病的功能连接方向相反。我们还观察到,亨廷顿氏病和帕金森病对感觉运动皮层内功能连通性的影响发生了改变,与之相反,再次与临床症状相关。因此,7T扫描仪提供的高分辨率使得探索疾病影响及其对丘脑下核和感觉运动皮层的贡献之间复杂的相互作用成为可能。综上所述,这些发现首次在人类中非侵入性地揭示了这两种运动障碍的病理生理过程对丘脑下核和感觉运动皮层的整体感觉运动功能连接的差异,具有临床意义。
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Subthalamic nucleus shows opposite functional connectivity pattern in Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease
Abstract Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease are two movement disorders representing mainly opposite states of the basal ganglia inhibitory function. Despite being an integral part of the cortico-subcortico-cortical circuitry, the subthalamic nucleus function has been studied at the level of detail required to isolate its signal only through invasive studies in Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease. Here, we tested whether the subthalamic nucleus exhibited opposite functional signatures in early Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease. We included both movement disorders in the same whole-brain imaging study, and leveraged ultra-high-field 7T MRI to achieve the very fine resolution needed to investigate the smallest of the basal ganglia nuclei. Eleven of the 12 Huntington’s disease carriers were recruited at a premanifest stage, while 16 of the 18 Parkinson’s disease patients only exhibited unilateral motor symptoms (15 were at Stage I of Hoehn and Yahr off medication). Our group comparison interaction analyses, including 24 healthy controls, revealed a differential effect of Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease on the functional connectivity at rest of the subthalamic nucleus within the sensorimotor network, i.e. an opposite effect compared with their respective age-matched healthy control groups. This differential impact in the subthalamic nucleus included an area precisely corresponding to the deep brain stimulation ‘sweet spot’—the area with maximum overall efficacy—in Parkinson’s disease. Importantly, the severity of deviation away from controls’ resting-state values in the subthalamic nucleus was associated with the severity of motor and cognitive symptoms in both diseases, despite functional connectivity going in opposite directions in each disorder. We also observed an altered, opposite impact of Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease on functional connectivity within the sensorimotor cortex, once again with relevant associations with clinical symptoms. The high resolution offered by the 7T scanner has thus made it possible to explore the complex interplay between the disease effects and their contribution on the subthalamic nucleus, and sensorimotor cortex. Taken altogether, these findings reveal for the first time non-invasively in humans a differential, clinically meaningful impact of the pathophysiological process of these two movement disorders on the overall sensorimotor functional connection of the subthalamic nucleus and sensorimotor cortex.
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