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Neurofunctional characteristics of executive control in older people with HIV infection: a comparison with Parkinson’s disease

Authors :
Eva M. Müller-Oehring
Jui-Yang Hong
Kathleen L. Poston
Helen M. Brontë-Stewart
Edith V. Sullivan
Lawrence McGlynn
Tilman Schulte
Source :
Brain Imaging Behav
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Expression of executive dysfunctions is marked by substantial heterogeneity in people living with HIV infection (PLWH) and attributed to neuropathological degradation of frontostriatal circuitry with age and disease. We compared the neurophysiology of executive function in older PLWH and Parkinson’s disease (PD), both affecting frontostriatal systems. Thirty-one older PLWH, 35 individuals with PD, and 28 older healthy controls underwent executive task-activated fMRI, neuropsychological testing, and a clinical motor exam. fMRI task conditions distinguished cognitive control operations, invoking a lateral frontoparietal network, and motor control operations, activating a cerebellar-precentral-medial prefrontal network. HIV-specific findings denoted a prominent sensorimotor hypoactivation during cognitive control and striatal hypoactivation during motor control related to CD4(+) T cell count and HIV disease duration. Activation deficits overlapped for PLWH and PD, relative to controls, in dorsolateral frontal, medial frontal, and middle cingulate cortices for cognitive control, and in limbic, frontal, parietal, and cerebellar regions for motor control. Thus, despite well-controlled HIV infection, frontostriatal and sensorimotor activation deficits occurred during executive control in older PLWH. Overlapping activation deficits in posterior cingulate and hippocampal regions point toward similarities in mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system aberrations among older PLWH and PD. The extent of pathophysiology in PLWH was associated with variations in immune system health, neural signature consistent with subclinical parkinsonism, and mild neurocognitive impairment. The failure to adequately engage these pathways could be an early sign for cognitive and motor functional decline in the aging population of PLWH.

Details

ISSN :
19317565 and 19317557
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Imaging and Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a2f7acbfc6c53c76b2cc9e563e9cd6d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-022-00645-6