Striatal dopamine depletion patterns and early non-motor burden in Parkinsons disease

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Abstract

Background The mechanism underlying non-motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease has not yet been elucidated. In this study, we hypothesized that Parkinson patients with more non-motor symptoms have a different pattern of striatal dopamine depletion, particularly in areas other than the sensorimotor striatum, compared to those with fewer non-motor symptoms. Methods We conducted a prospective survey of the degree of non-motor symptoms (using the Korean version of the Non-Motor Symptoms Scale; K-NMSS) in 151 patients with earlystage Parkinson's disease who had undergone a dopamine transporter PET scan as an initial diagnostic procedure. We classified the patients into two groups; high non-motor patients (HNM-PD; K-NMSS score ≥ 41) and low non-motor patients (LNM-PD). Results Patients in the HNM-PD group (n = 71) were older, had longer symptom duration, exhibited more severe motor deficits, and had been prescribed higher levodopa-equivalent doses at follow-up than those in the LNM-PD group. However, dopamine transporter binding to the striatal sub-regions and inter-sub-regional binding ratios were comparable between the two groups. A general linear model showed that the HNM-PD group had significantly more severe motor deficits than the LNM-PD group after controlling for age, gender, symptom duration, and dopamine transporter binding to the sensorimotor striatum. Conclusions This study demonstrated that the pattern of striatal dopamine depletion does not contribute to early non-motor burden in Parkinson's disease. Our results suggest that LNM-PD patients may have a more benign course of motor symptom progression than HNM-PD patients.

Figures

  • Table 1. Clinical characteristics and dopamine transporter binding to the striatal sub-regions.
  • Table 2. Independent predictors of early non-motor burden in Parkinson’s disease.
  • Table 3. Effect of early non-motor burden and dopamine transporter binding to the sensorimotor striatum on initial UPDRS-motor score.
  • Fig 1. UPDRS-motor score and dopamine transporter (DAT) binding between the two groups.HNM-PD (closed circle) showed higher UPDRS-motor scores than LNM-PD (open circle) at similar DAT level. However, group (HNM-PD, solid line/LNM-PD, dotted line) and DAT activity interaction was non-significant for UPDRS-motor scores.
  • Fig 2. Levodopa-equivalent dose and follow-up duration between the two groups.HNM-PD (closed circle) received higher levodopa-equivalent dose than LNM-PD (open circle) at similar follow-up duration. However, group (HNM-PD, solid line/LNM-PD, dotted line) and follow-up duration interaction was non-significant for levodopa-equivalent doses.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Chung, S. J., Lee, J. J., Ham, J. H., Ye, B. S., Lee, P. H., & Sohn, Y. H. (2016). Striatal dopamine depletion patterns and early non-motor burden in Parkinsons disease. PLoS ONE, 11(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161316

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