| Literature DB >> 32411811 |
Jung Bin Kim1, Zephaniah Phillips2, Seung-Ho Paik2,3, Shin-Young Kang2, Nam-Joon Jeon4, Byung-Jo Kim1,5, Beop-Min Kim1.
Abstract
Significance: Monitoring of cerebral perfusion rather than blood pressure changes during a head-up tilt test (HUTT) is proposed to understand the pathophysiological effect of orthostatic intolerance (OI), including orthostatic hypotension (OH), in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. Aim: We aim to characterize and distinguish the cerebral perfusion response to a HUTT for healthy controls (HCs) and PD patients with OI symptoms. Approach: Thirty-nine PD patients with OI symptoms [10 PD patients with OH (PD-OH) and 29 PD patients with normal HUTT results (PD-NOR)], along with seven HCs participated. A 108-channel diffuse optical tomography (DOT) system was used to reconstruct prefrontal oxyhemoglobin (HbO), deoxyhemoglobin (Hb), and total hemoglobin (HbT) changes during dynamic tilt (from supine to 70-deg tilt) and static tilt (remained tilted at 70 deg).Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; autonomic dysfunction; diffuse optical tomography; head-up tilt; orthostatic hypotension
Year: 2020 PMID: 32411811 PMCID: PMC7202364 DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.7.2.025002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurophotonics ISSN: 2329-423X Impact factor: 3.593
Fig. 1(a) Approximate placement of sources and detectors of the DOT system on the prefrontal area of the subject. (b) Sensitivity of DOT system, rendered in AtlasViewer. (c) Example of hemodynamic changes during the entire HUTT for one healthy control. The baseline period from which relative hemodynamics are calculated is indicated on the graph. In addition, an example of the fitting line used to quantify the rate of hemodynamic changes is indicated on the graph.
Demographics and clinical characteristics.
| PD-OH ( | PD-NOR ( | Healthy ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 0.343 | |||
| Male, | 5 (50.0) | 20 (69.0) | 3 (42.9) | 0.446 |
| Hypertension, | 4 (40.0) | 14 (48.3) | 0 | 0.726 |
| H&Y stage | — | 0.346 | ||
| UPDRS part III | — | 0.291 | ||
| COMPASS | — | 0.085 | ||
| CASS | — | 0.049 | ||
| MMSE | — | 0.577 | ||
| MoCA | — | 0.511 | ||
| Rate of HbO change ( | 0.613 |
Note: Each value represents the mean value ± standard deviation. Independent -test was used to compare the variables between the groups.
CASS, composite autonomic severity score; COMPASS, composite autonomic symptom score; H&Y, Hoehn and Yahr; HUTT, head-up tilt test; MMSE, mini-mental state exam; MoCA, Montreal cognitive assessment; OH, orthostatic hypotension; PD, Parkinson’s disease; PD-OH, PD with OH; PD-NOR, PD with normal HUTT; UPDRS, unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale.
Chi-square test was performed.
Fig. 2HUTT hemodynamic time series changes for (a) healthy controls, (b) PD with OH patients, and (c) PD normal. Hemodynamics changes include HbO (red), Hb (blue), and HbT (green). The gray-shaded area marks the period of dynamic tilting. A statistical difference () between PD groups and healthy controls is denoted with a colored bar over the time points. The color of the bar responds to the hemodynamic value that tested significantly different. (d)–(f) Average BP changes relative to start of HUTT from the (a)–(c) subject groups: changes in systolic pressure (green), diastolic (orange), and MAP (maroon).
Fig. 3Group average of the difference in HbT, HbO, and Hb for (a) healthy controls, (b) PD patients with OH, and (c) PD patients with normal HUTT. A 5-s averaged DOT image at 30 to 35 s ( after start of static tilt) was subtracted from a 5-s averaged DOT image at 10 to 15 s within dynamic tilt.
Fig. 4Rate of change for the linear fit of HbO ( axis) and Hb ( axis) from 15 to 60 s of tilting for individual healthy controls [blue circle in (a), (c)], PD with OH patients [red circle in (a), (c)], and PD patients with normal HUTT results [magenta circle in (b), (d)]. A Gaussian mixed model was fitted to each group and the centroid (outlined circle) of each group was determined through -means clustering.
Demographics and clinical characteristics of Parkinson’s disease patients with normal HUTT results.
| Negative HbO ( | Positive HbO ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | |||
| Male, | 7 (58.3) | 13 (76.5) | 0.422 |
| Hypertension, | 4 (33.3) | 10 (58.8) | 0.264 |
| H&Y stage | 0.284 | ||
| UPDRS part III | 0.839 | ||
| COMPASS | 0.045 | ||
| CASS | 0.093 | ||
| MMSE | 0.636 | ||
| MoCA | 0.645 | ||
| Rate of HbO change ( |
Note: Each value represents the mean value ± standard deviation. Independent -test was used to compare the variables between the groups.
CASS, composite autonomic severity score; COMPASS, composite autonomic symptom score; H&Y, Hoehn & Yahr; HbO, oxyhemoglobin; MMSE, mini-mental state exam; MoCA, Montreal cognitive assessment; OH, orthostatic hypotension; PD, Parkinson’s disease; UPDRS, unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale.
Chi-square test was performed. Negative HbO represents a negative rate of HbO change during tilting, and positive HbO represents a positive rate of the change.
Correlation of rate of HbO change and rate of MAP change.
| PD-OH | PD-NOR negative | PD-NOR positive | Healthy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rate of HbO change ( | ||||
| Rate of MAP change ( | ||||
| 0.168 | 0.074 | 0.001 | 0.299 |
COMPASS scores of PD-NOR subgroups and PD-OH.
| Mean | Median | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD-NOR positive rate of HbO change | 11 | 0.016 | ||
| PD-NOR negative rate of HbO change | 18 | 0.79 | ||
| PD-OH | 26 | — |
Fig. 5Group average of HbT, HbO, and Hb changes after 100 s of remaining in static tilt, for (a) PD normal with a positive rate of HbO change and (b) PD normal with a negative rate of HbO change. The DOT images were averaged over 10 s.