| Literature DB >> 35854141 |
Jackson Tyler Boonstra1,2, Hugo McGurran3,4, Yasin Temel5,6, Ali Jahanshahi5,6,7.
Abstract
The neuropathological substrates of Parkinson's disease (PD) patients with motor subtypes tremor-dominance (TD), non-tremor dominance (nTD), postural instability and gait difficulty (PIGD), and akinetic-rigid (AR) are not completely differentiated. While extensive pathological research has been conducted on neuronal tissue of PD patients, data have not been discussed in the context of mechanistic circuitry theories differentiating motor subtypes. It is, therefore, expected that a more specific and tailored management of PD symptoms can be accomplished by understanding symptom-specific neuropathological mechanisms with the detail histology can provide. This scoping review gives an overview of the literature comparing TD and nTD PD motor subtypes by clarify observed pathology with underlying physiological circuitry theories. Studies using an array of pathological examination techniques have shown significant differences between TD and nTD PD subtypes. nTD PD patients show higher neuronal loss, gliosis, extraneuronal melanin deposits, and neuroaxonal dystrophy in multiple subregions of the substantia nigra (SN) related to the overactivity of the indirect motor loop. TD patients show more severe cell loss specifically in medial SN subdivisions, and have damage in the retrorubral field A-8 that projects to the dorsolateral striatum and ventromedial thalamus in the direct motor loop. Pathological studies are consistent with neuroimaging data and support contemporary mechanistic circuitry theories of PD motor symptom genesis. Further multimodal neuroimaging and histological studies are required to validate and expand upon these findings.Entities:
Keywords: Circuitopathies; Motor subtypes; Parkinson’s disease; Pathology; Scoping review; Substantia nigra
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35854141 PMCID: PMC9418085 DOI: 10.1007/s00429-022-02531-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Struct Funct ISSN: 1863-2653 Impact factor: 3.748
Fig. 1‘Dynamic activity model’ diagraming voluntary control of movement. A Normal state, B Parkinson's disease, C Dystonia. Spatial distributions (left) and temporal patterns (right) of neuronal activity are illustrated in each panel. STN; subthalamic nucleus, GPi/SNr; internal global pallidus/substantia nigra, Th; thalamus. Reprinted with permission from Nambu et al. (2015)
Neuropathological variances in Parkinson’s disease motor subtypes
| Article | Patient numbers per subtype | Methods | Findings | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD | TD | nTD | PIGD | AR | Mixed | HC | |||
| Bernheimer et al. ( | 28 | 28 | IHC | Degree of akinesia correlated with DA and HVA decreases in the caudate nucleus, while the degree of tremor matched best with the degree of HVA decrease in the pallidum | |||||
| Rinne et al. ( | 12 | 18 | IHC | Positive association found between rigidity and hypokinesia and low neuronal densities in the SNL | |||||
| Paulus et al. ( | 18 | 27 | IHC | AR had a higher degree of gliosis in the SNM and SNL and more intense extraneuronal melanin deposits in the SNL. Neuroaxonal dystrophy of the SN reticula was seen in 10/28 AR but not in any of the 15 TD. AR have higher neuronal loss in the SNL and SNM and LC. Neuronal reduction in the DRN did not differ between AR and TD | |||||
| Jellinger and Paulus ( | 18 | 27 | IHC | AR show degeneration of the striatonigral dopaminergic system and neuronal loss in SNL, SNM, and noradrencrgic LC. Tremor was related to other anatomo-pathophysiological substrates | |||||
| Rajput et al. ( | 34 | 11 | x | The majority of tremor-onset cases had Lewy body disease while the majority of PIGD-onset cases had other forms of pathology | |||||
| Halliday et al. ( | 20 | 15 | IHC | Greater dorsomedial SN cell loss was seen in PD patients with resting tremor than in those without tremor (85% loss compared to 70%, respectively) | |||||
| McRitchie et al. ( | 7 | 5 | IHC | A8 regions appear largely unaffected in AR PD | |||||
| Rajput et al. ( | 3 | 3 | 2 | 5 | HPLC | AR have greater loss of DA in both the dorsal and ventral regions of the rostral GPi compared to TD and Mixed | |||
| Selikhova et al. ( | 242 | 88 | 93 | Review | nTD have higher mean pathological grading of cortical Lewy bodies, more cortical amyloid-b plaque load, and more cerebral amyloid angiopathy compared to the EDO onset group and to TD. nTD have higher burdens of cortical Lewy bodies in the frontal regions and more severe plague formation in the neocortex compared to EOD and TD. EOD and TD were more likely to have brainstem and limbic Lewy body disease compared to nTD. Neocortical Lewy body class was more related to sever bradykinesia and falls than localized or limbic Lewy body disease was | ||||
| Selikhova et al. (2013) | 15 | 15 BT PD | IHC | Benign tremulous PD had less global neuronal loss in the substantia nigra compared to pathological controls. Benign tremulous PD had less cell loss in all nigral subregions compared to pathological controls. The most severe cell loss was seen in the ventrolateral nigra, while the medial nigra showed the greatest difference between benign tremulous PD and pathological controls | |||||
| De Pablo-Fernandez et al. ( | 111 | Review | Staging of Lewy pathology and Alzheimer disease–related pathology did not differ between unique PD subtypes, but showed different rates of progression | ||||||
A8 dopaminergic cell group A8, AR akinetic-rigid, BT benign tremulous, DA dopamine, DRN dorsal raphe nucleus, EOD early onset disease, GPi global pallidus internal, HC healthy control, HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography, HVA homovanillic acid, IHC immunohistochemistry, LC locus coeruleus, Mixed mixed-ratio subtype, nTD non-tremor dominant, PD Parkinson’s disease, PIGD postural instability and gait difficulty, SNL substantia nigra lateral, SN substantia nigra, SNM substantia nigra medial, TD tremor-dominant
Substantia nigra neuroimaging findings in Parkinson’s disease motor subtypes
| Article | Patient numbers per subtype | Methods | Findings | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD | TD | nTD | PIGD | AR | Mixed | HC | |||
| [44] | 14 | 14 | DTI | Reduced FA in PD patients SN was greater in the caudal region compared with the middle and rostral regions | |||||
| [45] | 12 | 20 | DTI | Alterations of FA in the SN and putamen correlate with increased UPDRS motor scores | |||||
| [46] | 9 | 12 | 20 | DTI | Reduced FA and increased MD and RD in the SN was largely driven by PIGD. Increased diffusivity in the globus pallidus correlated with disease stage and motor severity in PIGD | ||||
| [48] | 9 | 14 | 20 | NM-MRI | PIGD have more severe signal attenuation in the medial SN of compared to TD, with the medial SN ipsilateral to the MAH having the greatest power to discriminate PD motor subtypes | ||||
| [49] | 70 | 20 | MR | SN MR phase shifts are positively correlated with UPDRS-III and bradykinesia-rigidity subscores but not with tremor subscores | |||||
| [50] | 10 | 10 | 20 | MR | Positive correlation between motor subtype ratio and R2* in the putamen, caudate, and thalamus but not in SN, with larger TD ratios having higher R2* | ||||
DTI diffusion tensor imaging, HC healthy control, Mixed mixed-ratio subtype, nTD non-tremor dominant, PD Parkinson’s disease, PIGD postural instability and gait difficulty, SN substantia nigra, TD tremor-dominant, MD mean diffusivity, RD radial diffusivity, MAH most affected hemisphere, MR magnetic resonance imaging, NM-MRI neuromelanin-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging, R2* relaxometry rate, FA fractional anisotropy, UPDRS Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale