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1.
Ann Neurol ; 96(2): 262-275, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38767012

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study was undertaken to investigate the effects of dietary caffeine intake on striatal dopamine function and clinical symptoms in Parkinson disease in a cross-sectional and longitudinal setting. METHODS: One hundred sixty-three early Parkinson disease patients and 40 healthy controls were investigated with [123I]FP-CIT single photon emission computed tomography, and striatal dopamine transporter binding was evaluated in association with the level of daily coffee consumption and clinical measures. After a median interval of 6.1 years, 44 patients with various caffeine consumption levels underwent clinical and imaging reexamination including blood caffeine metabolite profiling. RESULTS: Unmedicated early Parkinson disease patients with high coffee consumption had 8.3 to 15.4% lower dopamine transporter binding in all studied striatal regions than low consumers, after accounting for age, sex, and motor symptom severity. Higher caffeine consumption was further associated with a progressive decline in striatal binding over time. No significant effects of caffeine on motor function were observed. Blood analyses demonstrated a positive correlation between caffeine metabolites after recent caffeine intake and dopamine transporter binding in the ipsilateral putamen. INTERPRETATION: Chronic caffeine intake prompts compensatory and cumulative dopamine transporter downregulation, consistent with caffeine's reported risk reduction in Parkinson disease. However, this decline does not manifest in symptom changes. Transiently increased dopamine transporter binding after recent caffeine intake has implications for dopaminergic imaging guidelines. ANN NEUROL 2024;96:262-275.


Subject(s)
Caffeine , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins , Parkinson Disease , Humans , Caffeine/administration & dosage , Male , Female , Parkinson Disease/metabolism , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Aged , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Cross-Sectional Studies , Dopamine/metabolism , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon , Longitudinal Studies , Coffee , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/diagnostic imaging , Corpus Striatum/drug effects , Tropanes
2.
Mov Disord ; 38(7): 1209-1222, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37212361

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cerebral dopamine neurotrophic factor (CDNF) is an unconventional neurotrophic factor that protects dopamine neurons and improves motor function in animal models of Parkinson's disease (PD). OBJECTIVE: The primary objectives of this study were to assess the safety and tolerability of both CDNF and the drug delivery system (DDS) in patients with PD of moderate severity. METHODS: We assessed the safety and tolerability of monthly intraputamenal CDNF infusions in patients with PD using an investigational DDS, a bone-anchored transcutaneous port connected to four catheters. This phase 1 trial was divided into a placebo-controlled, double-blind, 6-month main study followed by an active-treatment 6-month extension. Eligible patients, aged 35 to 75 years, had moderate idiopathic PD for 5 to 15 years and Hoehn and Yahr score ≤ 3 (off state). Seventeen patients were randomized to placebo (n = 6), 0.4 mg CDNF (n = 6), or 1.2 mg CDNF (n = 5). The primary endpoints were safety and tolerability of CDNF and DDS and catheter implantation accuracy. Secondary endpoints were measures of PD symptoms, including Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale, and DDS patency and port stability. Exploratory endpoints included motor symptom assessment (PKG, Global Kinetics Pty Ltd, Melbourne, Australia) and positron emission tomography using dopamine transporter radioligand [18 F]FE-PE2I. RESULTS: Drug-related adverse events were mild to moderate with no difference between placebo and treatment groups. No severe adverse events were associated with the drug, and device delivery accuracy met specification. The severe adverse events recorded were associated with the infusion procedure and did not reoccur after procedural modification. There were no significant changes between placebo and CDNF treatment groups in secondary endpoints between baseline and the end of the main and extension studies. CONCLUSIONS: Intraputamenally administered CDNF was safe and well tolerated, and possible signs of biological response to the drug were observed in individual patients. © 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.


Subject(s)
Parkinson Disease , Animals , Parkinson Disease/drug therapy , Dopamine , Nerve Growth Factors/physiology , Nerve Growth Factors/therapeutic use , Dopaminergic Neurons , Drug Delivery Systems , Double-Blind Method
3.
Brain Behav ; 13(7): e3097, 2023 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37254594

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal symptoms are common in Parkinson's disease (PD), but their neurophysiological correlates are not well understood. We recently reported that functional gastrointestinal symptoms were not associated with asymmetry per se but might be associated with lower left striatal dopamine transporter (DAT) binding. The purpose of this study was to further investigate if specific gastrointestinal symptoms associate with monoamine transporter changes in specific striatal or extrastriatal areas. METHODS: Ninety PD patients, who underwent DAT ¹2 3 I-FP-CIT SPECT imaging, were assessed using the MDS-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale part III, Rome III, and Wexner constipation score. DAT binding was calculated from striatal subregions using region-to-occipital cortex ratio. Voxel-wise analysis was used to assess the relationship between gastrointestinal symptoms and striatal DAT and extrastriatal serotonin transporter (SERT) binding. RESULTS: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) criteria were fulfilled in 17 patients and were linked to higher ¹2 3 I-FP-CIT binding in the right posterior putamen and adjacent areas as compared to patients without IBS. No other significant associations between gastrointestinal symptoms and DAT or SERT binding were found. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that PD patients with IBS may have higher DAT binding in the right hemisphere. This finding implicates alterations of brain neurotransmitter physiology in the gastrointestinal symptoms of PD patients.


Subject(s)
Irritable Bowel Syndrome , Parkinson Disease , Humans , Parkinson Disease/complications , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Parkinson Disease/metabolism , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Irritable Bowel Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Irritable Bowel Syndrome/metabolism , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/metabolism , Corpus Striatum/diagnostic imaging , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins
4.
Clin Park Relat Disord ; 8: 100184, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36817695

ABSTRACT

Diagnostic usefulness of the floating door sign was tested in 144 PD patients, 41 essential tremor patients and 38 controls. There were no differences in the presence of floating door sign between PD and ET patients. The sign does not seem to be a reliable differential diagnostic tool.

5.
NPJ Parkinsons Dis ; 8(1): 129, 2022 Oct 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36216843

ABSTRACT

Gut microbiota alterations in Parkinson's disease (PD) have been found in several studies and are suggested to contribute to the pathogenesis of PD. However, previous results could not be adequately adjusted for a potential confounding effect of PD medication and disease duration, as almost all PD participants were already using dopaminergic medication and were included several years after diagnosis. Here, the gut microbiome composition of treatment-naive de novo PD subjects was assessed compared to healthy controls (HC) in two large independent case-control cohorts (n = 136 and 56 PD, n = 85 and 87 HC), using 16S-sequencing of fecal samples. Relevant variables such as technical batches, diet and constipation were assessed for their potential effects. Overall gut microbiome composition differed between PD and HC in both cohorts, suggesting gut microbiome alterations are already present in de novo PD subjects at the time of diagnosis, without the possible confounding effect of dopaminergic medication. Although no differentially abundant taxon could be replicated in both cohorts, multiple short chain fatty acids (SCFA) producing taxa were decreased in PD in both cohorts. In particular, several taxa belonging to the family Lachnospiraceae were decreased in abundance. Fewer taxonomic differences were found compared to previous studies, indicating smaller effect sizes in de novo PD.

6.
J Neural Transm (Vienna) ; 129(7): 895-904, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35624405

ABSTRACT

Micrographia is a common symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD), and it may precede other motor symptoms. Despite the high prevalence of micrographia in PD, its neurobiological mechanisms are not known. Given that levodopa may alleviate consistent micrographia and that nondopaminergic essential tremor (ET) is not associated with micrographia, micrographia could possibly be used as an ancillary diagnostic method that reflects nigrostriatal dopamine function. We evaluated the usefulness of micrographia as a simple one-sentence writing test in differentiating PD from ET. A total of 146 PD patients, 42 ET patients and 38 healthy controls provided writing samples and were scanned with brain [123I]FP-CIT dopamine transporter (DAT) SPECT imaging with ROI-based and voxelwise analyses. The diagnostic accuracy of micrographia was evaluated and compared to that of DAT binding. Compared to ET and healthy controls, PD patients showed micrographia (consistent, 25.6% smaller area of handwriting sample in PD compared to ET, p = 0.002, and 27.2% smaller area of handwriting compared to healthy controls, p = 0.004). PD patients showed 133% more severe progressive micrographia compared with ET patients (median b = - 0.14 in PD, b = - 0.06 in ET, p = 0.021). In early unmedicated cognitively normal patients, consistent micrographia showed 71.2% specificity and 87.5% sensitivity in PD versus ET differentiation, but micrographia had no correlation with striatal or extrastriatal [123I]FP-CIT binding in patients with PD. The one-sentence micrographia test shows moderately good accuracy in PD versus ET differentiation. The severity of micrographia has no relationship with DAT binding, suggesting nondopaminergic mechanism of micrographia in PD.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02650843 (NMDAT study).


Subject(s)
Essential Tremor , Parkinson Disease , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Iodine Radioisotopes , Parkinson Disease/complications , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon/methods , Tropanes
7.
Mov Disord ; 37(6): 1284-1289, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35274368

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The neurophysiological correlates of gastrointestinal symptoms (GISs) in Parkinson's disease (PD) are not well understood. It has been proposed that in patients with a gastrointestinal origin of PD dopaminergic neurodegeneration would be more symmetric. OBJECTIVES: The aim is to assess the associations between GISs and asymmetry of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurodegeneration in PD. METHODS: Ninety PD patients were assessed using motor and GIS scales and 123 I-FP-CIT SPECT. We calculated the asymmetry index and the predominant side of motor symptoms and dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging defect and assessed their association with GISs. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in GISs between symmetric and asymmetric dopaminergic defect. Left predominant defect was related to more GIS and higher constipation scores. CONCLUSIONS: GISs were associated with left predominant reduction in putaminal DAT binding but not asymmetry per se. It remains open whether left-sided DAT deficit is related to more pronounced GI involvement or symptom perception in PD. © 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson Movement Disorder Society.


Subject(s)
Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins , Parkinson Disease , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Dopamine/metabolism , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Parkinson Disease/complications , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Parkinson Disease/metabolism , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon/methods , Tropanes/metabolism
8.
J Neural Transm (Vienna) ; 128(11): 1655-1661, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34328563

ABSTRACT

Glabellar tap or reflex (GR) is an old bedside clinical test used in the diagnostics of Parkinson's disease (PD), but its diagnostic value is unclear. This study examines the diagnostic validity and reliability of GR in PD in relation to brain dopaminergic activity. GR was performed on 161 patients with PD, 47 patients with essential tremor (ET) and 40 healthy controls immediately prior to dopamine transporter (DAT) [123I]FP-CIT SPECT scanning. The binding ratios were investigated with consideration of the GR result (normal/abnormal). In addition, the consistency of the GR was investigated with 89 patients after a mean follow-up of 2.2 years. PD and ET patients had higher GR scores than healthy controls (p < 0.001), but there was no difference in GR between PD and ET patients (p = 0.09). There were no differences in the ratio of abnormal to normal GRs between the PD and ET groups (73% vs. 64% abnormal, respectively, p = 0.13) or in DAT binding between PD patients with abnormal and normal GRs (p > 0.36). Over follow-up, the GR changed from abnormal to normal in 20% of PD patients despite the presence of clinically typical disease. The sensitivity and specificity of GR for differentiating PD from ET were 78.3% and 36.2%, respectively. Although GR has been used by clinicians in the diagnostics of PD, it does not separate PD from ET. It also shows considerable inconsistency over time, and abnormal GR has no relationship with dopamine loss. Its usefulness should be tested for other clinical diagnostic purposes.


Subject(s)
Essential Tremor , Parkinson Disease , Dopamine , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins , Essential Tremor/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Reproducibility of Results , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon , Tropanes
9.
J Neurol Sci ; 404: 124-127, 2019 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31374410

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Non-motor symptoms (NMSs) are clearly more prevalent in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients compared to healthy individuals. However, NMSs are also common in the elderly and other neurological conditions, and thus, it is not known whether NMSs could be used to differentiate PD from parkinsonism/tremor without dopamine deficiency. METHODS: We prospectively evaluated NMSs immediately before brain dopamine transporter (DAT) [123I]FP-CIT SPECT scanning in 193 patients with unclear parkinsonism/tremor. According to the clinical follow-up and imaging results, 84 patients had PD. NMSs and their correlations with striatal DAT binding were investigated in PD patients and in parkinsonism/tremor patients with normal dopamine function. RESULTS: Total NMS burden, anxiety or depression did not differ between PD patients and patients with normal DAT binding. DAT-normal patients reported more perception-related (p = 0.045) and attention/memory-related NMSs than PD patients (p < 0.001). Total NMS score did not correlate with striatal DAT binding in either group. CONCLUSIONS: In clinically uncertain cases, the total NMS burden cannot be used as a tool in distinguishing PD patients from patients with non-dopaminergic parkinsonism/tremor. Clinical screening of NMSs appears equally important in all patients with parkinsonism.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum/diagnostic imaging , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Parkinsonian Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Tremor/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Parkinsonian Disorders/metabolism , Severity of Illness Index , Symptom Assessment , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon , Tremor/metabolism , Young Adult
10.
J Neurol ; 266(4): 826-834, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30687897

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Total parkinsonian motor symptom severity correlates with presynaptic striatal dopamine function in patients with Parkinson's disease. There is a lack of studies that have investigated the associations between parkinsonian motor signs and striatal dopaminergic deficiency in patients with parkinsonism of an unknown origin. Identification of specific motor signs associated with the highest likelihood of striatal dopamine deficiency could aid the differential diagnostics of parkinsonian and tremor syndromes. METHODS: In this cross-sectional clinical and imaging study, detailed motor examinations were performed for 221 patients with parkinsonism or tremor of an unknown origin immediately before dopamine transporter (DAT) [I-123]FP-CIT SPECT imaging. Region-of-interest and voxel-based methods were used to investigate striatal DAT deficiency in relation to individual motor signs. RESULTS: Upper extremity rigidity and facial expression were the only motor signs that differentiated patients with normal and abnormal striatal DAT function. The presence of any upper extremity rigidity showed the highest likelihood of DAT deficiency (OR 4.79, 95% CI 1.56-14.75, P = 0.006) followed by reduced facial expression (OR 2.14, 95% CI 1.14-4.00, P = 0.018). In patients with DAT deficits, reduced facial expression was associated with DAT deficiency specifically in the caudate nucleus, and increased upper extremity rigidity was associated with DAT loss in the dorsal putamen (FWE-corrected P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Increased upper extremity muscle tone and hypomimia are independently associated with a higher likelihood of striatal hypodopaminergic imaging finding. This information can be used as a factor when the clinical need of auxiliary investigations, such as DAT SPECT, is considered for patients with parkinsonism.


Subject(s)
Corpus Striatum/metabolism , Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins/deficiency , Facial Expression , Muscle Rigidity/physiopathology , Parkinsonian Disorders/physiopathology , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon , Aged , Brain Mapping , Corpus Striatum/diagnostic imaging , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Muscle Rigidity/diagnostic imaging , Parkinsonian Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Prospective Studies , Radiopharmaceuticals , Tropanes , Upper Extremity
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