Neurobiology of Disease (May 2024)

Microstructural alterations of the hypothalamus in Parkinson's disease and probable REM sleep behavior disorder

  • Cheng Zhou,
  • Jia You,
  • Xiaojun Guan,
  • Tao Guo,
  • Jingjing Wu,
  • Haoting Wu,
  • Chenqing Wu,
  • Jingwen Chen,
  • Jiaqi Wen,
  • Sijia Tan,
  • Xiaojie Duanmu,
  • Jianmei Qin,
  • Peiyu Huang,
  • Baorong Zhang,
  • Wei Cheng,
  • Jianfeng Feng,
  • Xiaojun Xu,
  • Linbo Wang,
  • Minming Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 194
p. 106472

Abstract

Read online

Background: Whether there is hypothalamic degeneration in Parkinson's disease (PD) and its association with clinical symptoms and pathophysiological changes remains controversial. Objectives: We aimed to quantify microstructural changes in hypothalamus using a novel deep learning-based tool in patients with PD and those with probable rapid-eye-movement sleep behavior disorder (pRBD). We further assessed whether these microstructural changes associated with clinical symptoms and free thyroxine (FT4) levels. Methods: This study included 186 PD, 67 pRBD, and 179 healthy controls. Multi-shell diffusion MRI were scanned and mean kurtosis (MK) in hypothalamic subunits were calculated. Participants were assessed using Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), RBD Questionnaire-Hong Kong (RBDQ-HK), Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD), and Activity of Daily Living (ADL) Scale. Additionally, a subgroup of PD (n = 31) underwent assessment of FT4. Results: PD showed significant decreases of MK in anterior-superior (a-sHyp), anterior-inferior (a-iHyp), superior tubular (supTub), and inferior tubular hypothalamus when compared with healthy controls. Similarly, pRBD exhibited decreases of MK in a-iHyp and supTub. In PD group, MK in above four subunits were significantly correlated with UPDRS-I, HAMD, and ADL. Moreover, MK in a-iHyp and a-sHyp were significantly correlated with FT4 level. In pRBD group, correlations were observed between MK in a-iHyp and UPDRS-I. Conclusions: Our study reveals that microstructural changes in the hypothalamus are already significant at the early neurodegenerative stage. These changes are associated with emotional alterations, daily activity levels, and thyroid hormone levels.

Keywords