Minh T Chau, Marc Agzarian, Robert A Wilcox, Gabrielle Todd
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The appearance of the substantia nigra (SN) can aid diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD). The effect of age and sex on the appearance of nigrosome-1 (SN subregion) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and the relationship between nigrosome-1 (viewed with MRI) and SN echogenicity (viewed with transcranial ultrasound) is unknown. The study aimed to address these knowledge gaps. It was hypothesized that age, sex, and area of SN echogenicity predict area of MRI hyperintense signal in nigrosome-1. The cross-sectional study involved a group of healthy adults (n = 105; aged 21-79 years) and adults diagnosed with PD (n = 37; aged 51-80 years). Multilevel mixed-effects regression analysis was used to investigate if age, sex, side, and area of SN echogenicity predict area of nigrosome-1 hyperintense signal. Area of nigrosome-1 hyperintense signal increased by an average of 0.045 mm2/year in healthy adults (p = 0.016) but not in adults living with PD. Sex, side, and area of SN echogenicity did not predict area of nigrosome-1 hyperintense signal in either group. Disease duration predicted area of nigrosome-1 hyperintense signal in the PD group (coefficient = -0.41, p = 0.014). The expected between-group differences (p < 0.001) in median area of nigrosome-1 hyperintense signal (smallest area across sides: healthy = 7.6 mm2, PD = 0.0 mm2) and SN echogenicity (largest area across sides: healthy = 14.3 mm2, PD = 29.3 mm2) were observed. The results suggest that the MRI appearance of nigrosome-1 can vary with age but not sex or area of SN echogenicity. The results further understanding of the nigrosome-1 biomarker for PD and aid interpretation of nigrosome-1 MRI findings in clinical settings.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the Neurological Sciences provides a medium for the prompt publication of original articles in neurology and neuroscience from around the world. JNS places special emphasis on articles that: 1) provide guidance to clinicians around the world (Best Practices, Global Neurology); 2) report cutting-edge science related to neurology (Basic and Translational Sciences); 3) educate readers about relevant and practical clinical outcomes in neurology (Outcomes Research); and 4) summarize or editorialize the current state of the literature (Reviews, Commentaries, and Editorials).
JNS accepts most types of manuscripts for consideration including original research papers, short communications, reviews, book reviews, letters to the Editor, opinions and editorials. Topics considered will be from neurology-related fields that are of interest to practicing physicians around the world. Examples include neuromuscular diseases, demyelination, atrophies, dementia, neoplasms, infections, epilepsies, disturbances of consciousness, stroke and cerebral circulation, growth and development, plasticity and intermediary metabolism.