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Cognitive executive impairment and dopaminergic deficits in de novo Parkinson's disease
Authors:Françoise J. Siepel MSc  Kolbjørn S. Brønnick PhD  Jan Booij MD  PhD  Bernard M. Ravina MD  MSCE  Alexander V. Lebedev MD  Joana B. Pereira PhD  Renate Grüner PhD  Dag Aarsland MD  PhD
Affiliation:1. Center for Age‐Related Medicine, Stavanger University Hospital, , Stavanger, Norway;2. TIPS‐Regional Center for Clinical Research in Psychosis, Stavanger University Hospital, , Stavanger, Norway;3. Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Stavanger, , Stavanger, Norway;4. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Academic Medical Center, , Amsterdam, The Netherlands;5. Neurology Department, University of Rochester School of Medicine, , Rochester, New York, USA;6. Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institute, , Stockholm, Sweden;7. Department of Radiology, Haukeland University Hospital, , Bergen, Norway;8. Department of Physics and Technology, University of Bergen, , Bergen, Norway;9. Department of Neurology, Akershus University Hospital, , L?renskog, Norway
Abstract:Cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD) is common and does directly impact patients' everyday functioning. However, the underlying mechanisms of early cognitive decline are not known. This study explored the association between striatal dopaminergic deficits and cognitive impairment within a large cohort of early, drug‐naïve PD patients and tested the hypothesis that executive dysfunction in PD is associated with striatal dopaminergic depletion. A cross‐sectional multicenter cohort of 339 PD patients and 158 healthy controls from the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative study was analyzed. Each individual underwent cerebral single‐photon emission CT (SPECT) and a standardized neuropsychological assessment with tests of memory as well as visuospatial and executive function. SPECT imaging was performed with [123I]FP‐CIT, and specific binding ratios in left and right putamen and caudate nucleus were calculated. The association between specific binding ratios, cognitive domain scores, and age was analyzed using Pearson's correlations, partial correlation, and conditional process analysis. A small, but significant, positive association between total striatal dopamine transporter binding and the attention/executive domain was found (r = 0.141; P = 0.009) in PD, but this was not significant after adjusting for age. However, in a moderated mediation model, we found that cognitive executive differences between controls and patients with PD were mediated by an age‐moderated striatal dopaminergic deficit. Our findings support the hypothesis that nigrostriatal dopaminergic deficit is associated with executive impairment, but not to memory or visuospatial impairment, in early PD. © 2014 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
Keywords:SPECT  Parkinson's disease  [123I]FP‐CIT  cognitive impairment  dopamine transporter
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