Mild behavioral impairment is linked to worse cognition and brain atrophy in Parkinson disease

OBJECTIVETo evaluate the associations of mild behavioral impairment (MBI) with cognitive deficits and patterns of gray matter changes in Parkinson disease (PD). METHODSSixty patients with PD without dementia and 29 healthy controls underwent a cognitive neuropsychological evaluation and structural M...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurology 2019-08, Vol.93 (8), p.e766-e777
Hauptverfasser: Yoon, Eun Jin, Ismail, Zahinoor, Hanganu, Alexandru, Kibreab, Mekale, Hammer, Tracy, Cheetham, Jenelle, Kathol, Iris, Sarna, Justyna R, Martino, Davide, Furtado, Sarah, Monchi, Oury
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVETo evaluate the associations of mild behavioral impairment (MBI) with cognitive deficits and patterns of gray matter changes in Parkinson disease (PD). METHODSSixty patients with PD without dementia and 29 healthy controls underwent a cognitive neuropsychological evaluation and structural MRI scan. MBI was evaluated with the MBI Checklist (MBI-C), a rating scale designed to elicit emergent neuropsychiatric symptoms in accordance with MBI criteria. We divided the patients with PD into 2 groups1 group with high MBI-C scores (PD-MBI) and the other with low MBI-C scores (PD-noMBI). RESULTSAmong 60 patients with PD, 20 were categorized as having PD-MBI (33.33%). In healthy controls, no participants met the MBI cut-point threshold. The PD-MBI group had significantly lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment and z scores in all 5 domains and the global score compared to healthy controls and those with PD-noMBI. In addition, all cognitive domains except language and global cognition negatively correlated with the MBI-C total score in all patients with PD. For cortical structures, the PD-MBI group revealed middle temporal cortex thinning and decreased volume compared with the PD-noMBI group, and decreased volume in this area negatively correlated with the MBI-C total score. CONCLUSIONSThe impaired cognitive function over all domains and atrophy in the temporal area in the PD-MBI group are in line with posterior cortical circuit deficits in PD, which have been associated with a faster rate of progression to dementia. These initial results suggest that MBI might be an early and important marker for incident cognitive decline and dementia in patients with PD.
ISSN:0028-3878
1526-632X
DOI:10.1212/WNL.0000000000007968