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Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Sparks, H; Riskin-Jones, H; Price, C; DiCesare, J; Bari, A; Hashoush, N; Pouratian, N
Published in: NeuroImage. Clinical
January 2020

The relationship between Parkinson Disease (PD) pathology, dopamine replacement therapy (DRT), and impulse control disorder (ICD) development is still incompletely understood. Given the sensorimotor-lateral substantia nigra (SN) selective degeneration associated with PD, we posit that a relative sparing of the limbic-medial SN in the context of DRT drives impulsive, reward-seeking behavior in PD patients with recent history of severe impulsivity.Impulsive and control participants were selected from a consecutive list of PD patients receiving pre-operative deep brain stimulation (DBS) planning scans including 3T structural MRI and 64 direction diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Using previously identified substantia nigra (SN) subsegment network connectivity profiles to develop classification targets, split-hemisphere target-based SN segmentation with probabilistic tractography was performed. The relative subsegment volumes and strength of connectivity between the SN and the limbic, associative, and motor network targets were compared.Our results show that there is greater probability of connectivity between the SN and limbic network targets relative to motor and associative network targets in PD patients with recent history of severe impulsivity as compared to PD patients without impulsivity (P = 0.0075). We did not observe relative volumetric subsegment differences across groups.Firstly, our results suggest that fine-grained, atlas-derived classification targets may be used in PD to parcellate and classify functionally distinct subsegments of the SN, with the apparent preservation of previously reported topographical limbic-medial SN, associative-ventral SN, and sensorimotor-lateral SN orientation. We suggest that relative, as opposed to absolute, degeneration amongst SN-associated dopaminergic networks relates to the impulsivity phenotype in PD.

Duke Scholars

Published In

NeuroImage. Clinical

DOI

EISSN

2213-1582

ISSN

2213-1582

Publication Date

January 2020

Volume

27

Start / End Page

102259

Related Subject Headings

  • Substantia Nigra
  • Reward
  • Parkinson Disease
  • Neural Pathways
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Impulsive Behavior
  • Humans
  • Female
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Sparks, H., Riskin-Jones, H., Price, C., DiCesare, J., Bari, A., Hashoush, N., & Pouratian, N. (2020). Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease. NeuroImage. Clinical, 27, 102259. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102259
Sparks, Hiro, Hannah Riskin-Jones, Collin Price, Jasmine DiCesare, Ausaf Bari, Nadia Hashoush, and Nader Pouratian. “Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease.NeuroImage. Clinical 27 (January 2020): 102259. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102259.
Sparks H, Riskin-Jones H, Price C, DiCesare J, Bari A, Hashoush N, et al. Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease. NeuroImage Clinical. 2020 Jan;27:102259.
Sparks, Hiro, et al. “Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease.NeuroImage. Clinical, vol. 27, Jan. 2020, p. 102259. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.nicl.2020.102259.
Sparks H, Riskin-Jones H, Price C, DiCesare J, Bari A, Hashoush N, Pouratian N. Impulsivity Relates to Relative Preservation of Mesolimbic Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson Disease. NeuroImage Clinical. 2020 Jan;27:102259.
Journal cover image

Published In

NeuroImage. Clinical

DOI

EISSN

2213-1582

ISSN

2213-1582

Publication Date

January 2020

Volume

27

Start / End Page

102259

Related Subject Headings

  • Substantia Nigra
  • Reward
  • Parkinson Disease
  • Neural Pathways
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Impulsive Behavior
  • Humans
  • Female