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Effects of dopamine agonist treatment on resting-state network connectivity in Parkinson’s disease

Authors :
Amir Samii
Christoph Schrader
Christian F. Beckmann
Reinhard Dengler
Katja Kollewe
Bahram Mohammadi
Thomas F Muente
Maria Milenkova
David M. Cole
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Dopamine agonist (DA) medications commonly used to treat, or ‘normalise’, motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease (PD) may lead to cognitive-neuropsychiatric side effects, such as increased impulsivity in decision-making. Subject-dependent variation in the neural response to dopamine modulation within cortico-basal ganglia circuitry is thought to play a key role in these latter, non-motor DA effects. This neuroimaging study combined resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with DA modification in patients with idiopathic PD, investigating whether brain ‘resting-state network’ (RSN) functional connectivity metrics identify disease-relevant effects of dopamine on systems-level neural processing. By comparing patients both ‘On’ and ‘Off’ their DA medications with age-matched, un-medicated healthy control subjects (HCs), we identified multiple non-normalising DA effects on frontal and basal ganglia RSN cortico-subcortical connectivity patterns in PD. Only a single isolated, potentially ‘normalising’, DA effect on RSN connectivity in sensori-motor systems was observed, within cerebro-cerebellar neurocircuitry. Impulsivity in reward-based decision-making was positively correlated with ventral striatal connectivity within basal ganglia circuitry in HCs, but not in PD patients. Overall, we provide brain systems-level evidence for anomalous DA effects in PD on large-scale networks supporting cognition and motivated behaviour. Moreover, findings suggest that dysfunctional striatal and basal ganglia signalling patterns in PD are compensated for by increased recruitment of other cortico-subcortical and cerebro-cerebellar systems.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71d776c6ca08654f5599fb12abce5347
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.31.928853