BMC Neurology (Apr 2008)

Shape (but not volume) changes in the thalami in Parkinson disease

  • Uthama Ashish,
  • McKeown Martin J,
  • Abugharbieh Rafeef,
  • Palmer Samantha,
  • Lewis Mechelle,
  • Huang Xuemei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-8-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recent pathological studies have suggested that thalamic degeneration may represent a site of non-dopaminergic degeneration in Parkinson's Disease (PD). Our objective was to determine if changes in the thalami could be non-invasively detected in structural MRI images obtained from subjects with Parkinson disease (PD), compared to age-matched controls. Results No significant differences in volume were detected in the thalami between eighteen normal subjects and eighteen PD subjects groups. However significant (p Conclusion Systematic changes in thalamic shape can be non-invasively assessed in PD in vivo. Shape changes, in addition to volume changes, may represent a new avenue to assess the progress of neurodegenerative processes. Although not directly discernable at the resolution of standard MRI, previous pathological studies would suggest that the shape changes detected in this study represent degeneration in the centre median-parafascicular (CM-Pf) complex, an area known to represent selective non-dopaminergic degeneration in PD.