White matter microstructure in Parkinson’s disease with and without elevated rapid eye movement sleep muscle tone

Author:

Patriat Rémi1ORCID,Pisharady Pramod K.1,Amundsen-Huffmaster Sommer2,Linn-Evans Maria23,Howell Michael2,Chung Jae Woo2ORCID,Petrucci Matthew N.2,Videnovic Aleksandar4,Holker Erin5,De Kam Joshua2,Tuite Paul2,Lenglet Christophe1,Harel Noam1,MacKinnon Colum D.2

Affiliation:

1. Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Department of Radiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

2. Department of Neurology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

3. Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

4. Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

5. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

Abstract

Abstract People with Parkinson’s disease who have elevated muscle activity during rapid eye movement sleep (REM sleep without atonia) typically have a worse motor and cognitive impairment compared with those with normal muscle atonia during rapid eye movement sleep. This study used tract-based spatial statistics to compare diffusion MRI measures of fractional anisotropy, radial, mean and axial diffusivity (measures of axonal microstructure based on the directionality of water diffusion) in white matter tracts between people with Parkinson’s disease with and without rapid eye movement sleep without atonia and controls and their relationship to measures of motor and cognitive function. Thirty-eight individuals with mild-to-moderate Parkinson’s disease and 21 matched control subjects underwent ultra-high field MRI (7 T), quantitative motor assessments of gait and bradykinesia and neuropsychological testing. The Parkinson’s disease cohort was separated post hoc into those with and without elevated chin or leg muscle activity during rapid eye movement sleep based on polysomnography findings. Fractional anisotropy was significantly higher, and diffusivity significantly lower, in regions of the corpus callosum, projection and association white matter pathways in the Parkinson’s group with normal rapid eye movement sleep muscle tone compared with controls, and in a subset of pathways relative to the Parkinson’s disease group with rapid eye movement sleep without atonia. The Parkinson’s disease group with elevated rapid eye movement sleep muscle tone showed significant impairments in the gait and upper arm speed compared with controls and significantly worse scores in specific cognitive domains (executive function, visuospatial memory) compared with the Parkinson’s disease group with normal rapid eye movement sleep muscle tone. Regression analyses showed that gait speed and step length in the Parkinson’s disease cohort were predicted by measures of fractional anisotropy of the anterior corona radiata, whereas elbow flexion velocity was predicted by fractional anisotropy of the superior corona radiata. Visuospatial memory task performance was predicted by the radial diffusivity of the posterior corona radiata. These findings show that people with mild-to-moderate severity of Parkinson’s disease who have normal muscle tone during rapid eye movement sleep demonstrate compensatory-like adaptations in axonal microstructure that are associated with preserved motor and cognitive function, but these adaptations are reduced or absent in those with increased rapid eye movement sleep motor tone.

Funder

National Institute of Health

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF

Silicon Valley Community Foundation

National Science Foundation

Wallin Neuroscience Foundation

Minnesota’s Discovery, Research, and Innovation Economy

Parkinson Study Group

Parkinson’s Disease Foundation’s Advancing Parkinson’s Treatments Innovations Grant

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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