Frontiers in Neurology (May 2024)

Multimodal imaging and electrophysiological study in the differential diagnosis of rest tremor

  • Federica Aracri,
  • Andrea Quattrone,
  • Andrea Quattrone,
  • Maria Giovanna Bianco,
  • Alessia Sarica,
  • Marida De Maria,
  • Camilla Calomino,
  • Marianna Crasà,
  • Rita Nisticò,
  • Jolanda Buonocore,
  • Basilio Vescio,
  • Maria Grazia Vaccaro,
  • Aldo Quattrone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2024.1399124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionDistinguishing tremor-dominant Parkinson's disease (tPD) from essential tremor with rest tremor (rET) can be challenging and often requires dopamine imaging. This study aimed to differentiate between these two diseases through a machine learning (ML) approach based on rest tremor (RT) electrophysiological features and structural MRI data.MethodsWe enrolled 72 patients including 40 tPD patients and 32 rET patients, and 45 control subjects (HC). RT electrophysiological features (frequency, amplitude, and phase) were calculated using surface electromyography (sEMG). Several MRI morphometric variables (cortical thickness, surface area, cortical/subcortical volumes, roughness, and mean curvature) were extracted using Freesurfer. ML models based on a tree-based classification algorithm termed XGBoost using MRI and/or electrophysiological data were tested in distinguishing tPD from rET patients.ResultsBoth structural MRI and sEMG data showed acceptable performance in distinguishing the two patient groups. Models based on electrophysiological data performed slightly better than those based on MRI data only (mean AUC: 0.92 and 0.87, respectively; p = 0.0071). The top-performing model used a combination of sEMG features (amplitude and phase) and MRI data (cortical volumes, surface area, and mean curvature), reaching AUC: 0.97 ± 0.03 and outperforming models using separately either MRI (p = 0.0001) or EMG data (p = 0.0231). In the best model, the most important feature was the RT phase.ConclusionMachine learning models combining electrophysiological and MRI data showed great potential in distinguishing between tPD and rET patients and may serve as biomarkers to support clinicians in the differential diagnosis of rest tremor syndromes in the absence of expensive and invasive diagnostic procedures such as dopamine imaging.

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