1. Dopaminergic Dysfunction Is More Symmetric in Dementia with Lewy Bodies Compared to Parkinson's Disease
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Fedorova, Tatyana Dmitrievna, Knudsen, Karoline, Horsager, Jacob, Hansen, Allan K., Okkels, Niels, Gottrup, Hanne, Vang, Kim, and Borghammer, Per
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Dopamine/metabolism ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Corpus Striatum/metabolism ,Lewy Bodies/metabolism ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Parkinson Disease/metabolism ,Lewy Body Disease/pathology ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background:The α-syn Origin site and Connectome model (SOC) proposes that α-synucleinopathies can be divided into two categories: the asymmetrical brain-first, and more symmetrical body-first Lewy body disease. We have hypothesized that most patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) belong to the body-first subtype, whereas patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) more often belong to the brain-first subtype.Objective:To compare asymmetry of striatal dopaminergic dysfunction in DLB and PD patients using [18F]-FE-PE2I positron emission tomography (PET).Methods:We analyzed [18F]-FE-PE2I PET data from 29 DLB patients and 76 PD patients who were identified retrospectively during a 5-year period at Dept. of Neurology, Aarhus University Hospital. Additionally, imaging data from 34 healthy controls was used for age-correction and visual comparison.Results:PD patients showed significantly more asymmetry in specific binding ratios between the most and least affected putamen (p Conclusion:Patients with DLB show significantly more symmetric striatal degeneration on average compared to PD patients. These results support the hypothesis that DLB patients may be more likely to conform to the body-first subtype characterized by a symmetrical spread of pathology, whereas PD patients may be more likely to conform to the brain-first subtype with more lateralized initial propagation of pathology.
- Published
- 2023
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