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Early cognitive impairment phenotype and functional connectivity in non-demented Parkinson’s disease patients

K. Kawabata, H. Watanabe, K. Hara, E. Bagarinao, N. Yoneyama, A. Ogura, K. Imai, M. Masuda, T. Yokoi, R. Ohdake, T. Tsuboi, M. Ito, N. Atsuta, M. Katsuno, G. Sobue (Nagoya, Japan)

Meeting: 2017 International Congress

Abstract Number: 1472

Keywords: Cognitive dysfunction, Functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI)

Session Information

Date: Thursday, June 8, 2017

Session Title: Parkinson's Disease: Neuroimaging And Neurophysiology

Session Time: 1:15pm-2:45pm

Location: Exhibit Hall C

Objective: This study was designed to clarify the relationship between early cognitive decline and functional connectivity changes in non-demented Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients.

Background: Cognitive impairment in PD is one of the most important non-motor symptoms. However, previous studies have yet to reveal the patterns of early cognitive decline and brain network changes.

Methods: We enrolled 72 non-demented PD patients and age- and gender- matched 72 healthy control subjects (HC). All participants underwent the Addenbrooke’s Cognitive Examination-Revised (ACE-R) which consists of 5 sub-scores (attention/orientation, memory, fluency, language and visuospatial ability). Based on ACE-R subscores, we classified PD patients who had all subscores ≥ average – 1.5SD of HC as PD-Cognitively Normal (PD-CN). Furthermore, we conducted hierarchical cluster analysis to the others who had at least one of subscores < -1.5SD to clarify the characteristic of early cognitive changes in PD. T1WI, T2WI, and resting-state functional MRI (rsfMRI) were obtained with a 3T MRI scanner.

Results: 28 PD patients was classified as PD-CN. Cluster analysis divided 44 PD patients who had at least one of subscores < -1.5SD into two groups: 20 PD patients who had predominantly decrease in memory (PD-Amnestic; PD-A) and 24 those who had good memory but decrease in other subscores in particular fluency and visuospatial ability (PD-Non Amnestic; PD-NA). In VBM study, PD-A showed significant atrophy of gray matter in the left amygdala, right rectal gyrus and middle occipital gyrus compared with HC (FWEc p<0.05). As for rsfMRI findings using independent component analysis, PD-A showed significant decreased functional connectivity in the ventral default mode network compared with all other groups and in the visuospatial network compared with HC. In contrast, PD-NA showed decreased connectivity in the visual network compared with HC and PD-CN as well in the cerebellum-brainstem network compared with HC and PD-A (FWE p<0.05).

Conclusions: PD patients showed distinct phenotypes of early cognitive impairment. RsfMRI study showed the different patterns of resting state network involvement depending on the phenotype.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

K. Kawabata, H. Watanabe, K. Hara, E. Bagarinao, N. Yoneyama, A. Ogura, K. Imai, M. Masuda, T. Yokoi, R. Ohdake, T. Tsuboi, M. Ito, N. Atsuta, M. Katsuno, G. Sobue. Early cognitive impairment phenotype and functional connectivity in non-demented Parkinson’s disease patients [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2017; 32 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/early-cognitive-impairment-phenotype-and-functional-connectivity-in-non-demented-parkinsons-disease-patients/. Accessed June 15, 2025.
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