Giovanni Palermo, Sara Giannoni, Luca Tommasini, Gabriele Bellini, Daniela Frosini, Gayane Aghakhanyan, Riccardo Morganti, Duccio Volterrani, Nicola Pavese, Roberto Ceravolo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Older age at onset and baseline caudate dopaminergic denervation are recognized risk factors for cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD), posing challenges in identifying their relative contribution to cognitive outcomes. The objective of this study was to assess the distinct contribution of age at onset and baseline caudate dopaminergic binding to the early cognitive deficits in PD patients. We examined the relationship between baseline dopaminergic striatal dysfunction (measured using [123I]-FP-CIT SPECT), age at disease onset and neuropsychological performance in 128 drug-naive PD patients, utilizing putaminal and caudate binding values of 77 healthy controls (HC) for a comparative exploration of age-dependent loss of DAT availability. Additionally, we investigated whether age at onset and DAT binding value of the caudate could independently predict cognitive changes over a median of 7-year follow-up. [123I]-FP-CIT-SPECT binding values had a significant negative correlation with age in both PD and HC, but in PD, aging was linked with a steeper slope for the caudate than the putamen. Older age at onset and lower caudate uptake were associated with worse global cognitive function and performance in specific neuropsychological tests at baseline and demonstrated to be significant independent predictors of cognitive dysfunction at follow-up. Our findings confirm a differential age effect on [123I]-FP-CIT binding in the striatal subregions of de novo PD patients. Notably, we found less age-related attrition of dopaminergic binding in the putamen than in the caudate, reflecting likely the superimposition of putaminal compensatory mechanisms and an increased predisposition of old onset PD patients to develop cognitive disturbances.
期刊介绍:
Aging & Disease (A&D) is an open-access online journal dedicated to publishing groundbreaking research on the biology of aging, the pathophysiology of age-related diseases, and innovative therapies for conditions affecting the elderly. The scope encompasses various diseases such as Stroke, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson’s disease, Epilepsy, Dementia, Depression, Cardiovascular Disease, Cancer, Arthritis, Cataract, Osteoporosis, Diabetes, and Hypertension. The journal welcomes studies involving animal models as well as human tissues or cells.