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Amnestic mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: A brain perfusion SPECT study
Authors:Flavio Nobili MD  Giovanni Abbruzzese MD  Silvia Morbelli MD  Roberta Marchese MD  Nicola Girtler PsyD  Barbara Dessi PsyD  Andrea Brugnolo PsyD  Cinzia Canepa MD    Giorgos Chr. Drosos MD  Gianmario Sambuceti MD  Guido Rodriguez MD
Affiliation:1. Clinical Neurophysiology (DISEM, DipTeC), University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy;2. Section of Neurology, Department of Neuroscience, Ophthalmology and Genetics, S. Martino University Hospital, Genoa, Italy;3. Nuclear Medicine (DIMI), S. Martino University Hospital, Genoa, Italy
Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to investigate cortical dysfunction in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients with amnestic deficit (PD‐MCI). Perfusion single photon emission computed tomography was performed in 15 PD‐MCI patients and compared (statistical parametric mapping [SPM2]) with three groups, i.e., healthy subjects (CTR), cognitively intact PD patients (PD), and common amnestic MCI patients (aMCI). Age, depression, and UPDRS‐III scores were considered as confounding variables. PD‐MCI group (P < 0.05, false discovery rate–corrected for multiple comparisons) showed relative hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal lobe and in right occipital lobe in comparison to CTR. As compared to aMCI, MCI‐PD demonstrated hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital areas, mainly right cuneus and angular gyrus, and left precuneus and middle occipital gyrus. With a less conservative threshold (uncorrected P < 0.01), MCI‐PD showed hypoperfusion in a left parietal region, mainly including precuneus and inferior parietal lobule, and in a right temporal‐parietal‐occipital region, including middle occipital and superior temporal gyri, and cuneus‐precuneus, as compared to PD. aMCI versus PD‐MCI showed hypoperfusion in bilateral medial temporal lobe, anterior cingulate, and left orbitofrontal cortex. PD‐MCI patients with amnestic deficit showed cortical dysfunction in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital lobes, a pattern that can be especially recognized versus both controls and common aMCI patients, and to a lesser extent versus cognitively intact PD. The relevance of this pattern in predicting dementia should be evaluated in longitudinal studies. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society
Keywords:Parkinson's disease  mild cognitive impairment  amnestic mild cognitive impairment  brain SPECT, SPM
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