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Left-hemispheric predominance of nigrostriatal deficit in isolated REM sleep behavior disorder

Álex Iranzo, Ambra Stefani, Aida Niñerola‐Baizán, Heike Stokner, Mónica Serradell, Dolores Vilas, Evi Holzknecht, Carles Gaig, Javier Pavı́a, Francesc Lomeña, David Reyes‐Leiva, Klaus Seppi, Joan Santamaría, Birgit Högl, Eduard Tolosa, Werner Poewe, the Sleep Innsbruck Barcelona (SINBAR) Group

2020Neurology33 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Unilateral onset of parkinsonism due to nigrostriatal damage of the contralateral hemisphere is frequent in Parkinson disease (PD). There is evidence for a left-hemispheric bias of motor asymmetry in right-handed patients with PD indicating a hemispheric dominance. Isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (IRBD) constitutes the prodromal stage of PD and other synucleinopathies. To test the hypothesis that right-handed patients with IRBD exhibit left-hemispheric predominance of subclinical nigrostriatal dysfunction, we evaluated this aspect using neuroimaging instruments. METHODS: In 167 right-handed patients with IRBD without parkinsonism, we evaluated in each hemisphere the integrity of the striatal dopaminergic terminals by dopamine transporter (DAT)-SPECT and the substantia nigra echogenicity by transcranial sonography. RESULTS: DAT-SPECT showed lower specific binding ratio (SBR) in the left striatum and left caudate nucleus than in the right striatum and right caudate nucleus. The percentage of patients with lower SBR was greater in the left striatum and left caudate nucleus than in the right striatum and right caudate nucleus. In those who developed a synucleinopathy in <5 years from DAT-SPECT, there was a lower SBR in the left putamen and left caudate nucleus than in the right putamen and right caudate nucleus. Substantia nigra echogenic size was greater in the left than in the right side in patients with hyperechogenicity and among individuals who phenoconverted in <5 years from transcranial sonography. CONCLUSION: Right-handed patients with IRBD exhibit left-hemispheric predominance of subclinical nigrostriatal dysfunction. In premotor PD, the neurodegenerative process begins asymmetrically, initially impairing the nigrostriatal system of the dominant hemisphere.

Topics & Concepts

Caudate nucleusPutamenSubstantia nigraStriatumPsychologyParkinson's diseaseNeuroscienceDopaminergicParkinsonismMedicineInternal medicineCardiologyDopamineDiseaseParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsHemispheric Asymmetry in NeuroscienceTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies
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