| Literature DB >> 29501966 |
Peter Manza1, Guy Schwartz2, Mala Masson3, Sarah Kann3, Nora D Volkow4, Chiang-Shan R Li5, Hoi-Chung Leung6.
Abstract
Dopaminergic medications improve the motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD), but their effect on response inhibition, a critical executive function, remains unclear. Previous studies primarily enrolled patients in more advanced stages of PD, when dopaminergic medication loses efficacy, and patients were typically on multiple medications. Here, we recruited 21 patients in early-stage PD on levodopa monotherapy and 37 age-matched controls to perform the stop-signal task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. In contrast to previous studies reporting null effects in more advanced PD, levodopa significantly improved response inhibition performance in our sample. No significant group differences were found in brain activations to pure motor inhibition or error processing (stop success vs. error trials). However, relative to controls, the PD group showed weaker striatal activations to salient events (infrequent vs. frequent events: stop vs. go trials) and fronto-striatal task-residual functional connectivity; both were restored with levodopa. Thus, levodopa appears to improve an important executive function in early-stage PD via enhanced salient signal processing, shedding new light on the role of dopaminergic signaling in response inhibition. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Basal ganglia; Cognitive control; Dopamine; Executive function; Movement disorders; Stop-signal task
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29501966 PMCID: PMC6436810 DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2018.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurobiol Aging ISSN: 0197-4580 Impact factor: 4.673