Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, 401 Quarry Road, Stanford, CA 94305-5723, USA.
Brain Imaging Behav. 2011 Mar;5(1):12-24. doi: 10.1007/s11682-010-9107-y.
Postural instability occurs in HIV infection, but quantitative balance tests in conjunction with neuroimaging are lacking. We examined whether infratentorial brain tissue volume would be deficient in nondemented HIV-infected individuals and whether selective tissue deficits would be related to postural stability and psychomotor speed performance. The 123 participants included 28 men and 12 women with HIV infection without dementia or alcohol use disorders, and 40 men and 43 women without medical or psychiatric conditions. Participants completed quantitative balance testing, Digit Symbol test, and a test of finger movement speed and dexterity. An infratentorial brain region, supratentorial ventricular system, and corpus callosum were quantified with MRI-derived atlas-based parcellation, and together with archival DTI-derived fiber tracking of pontocerebellar and internal and external capsule fiber systems, brain measures were correlated with test performance. The tissue ratio of the infratentorium was ~3% smaller in the HIV than control group. The HIV group exhibited performance deficits in balancing on one foot, walking toe-to-heel, Digit Symbol substitution task, and time to complete all Digit Symbol grid boxes. Total infratentorial tissue ratio was a significant predictor of balance and Digit Symbol scores. Balance scores did not correlate significantly with ventricular volumes, callosal size, or internal or external capsule fiber integrity but did so with indices of pontocerebellar tract integrity. HIV-infected individuals specifically recruited to be without complications from alcohol use disorders had pontocerebellar tissue volume deficits with functional ramifications. Postural stability and psychomotor speed were impaired and attributable, at least in part, to compromised infratentorial brain systems.
HIV 感染会导致姿势不稳,但缺乏结合神经影像学的定量平衡测试。我们研究了非痴呆的 HIV 感染者是否存在小脑组织体积不足,以及选择性组织缺陷是否与姿势稳定性和精神运动速度表现有关。123 名参与者包括 28 名男性和 12 名女性 HIV 感染者,无痴呆或酒精使用障碍,以及 40 名男性和 43 名女性无医疗或精神疾病。参与者完成了定量平衡测试、数字符号测试,以及手指运动速度和灵巧性测试。采用基于 MRI 图谱的分割方法对小脑幕下脑区、大脑半球脑室系统和胼胝体进行定量,并结合既往 DTI 衍生的桥脑小脑和内囊、外囊纤维束系统纤维跟踪,将脑测量值与测试表现相关联。与对照组相比,HIV 组小脑幕下组织比例小约 3%。HIV 组在单脚平衡、足跟脚尖行走、数字符号替代任务以及完成所有数字符号方格所需的时间方面表现出表现缺陷。小脑幕下总组织比例是平衡和数字符号评分的显著预测因子。平衡评分与脑室容积、胼胝体大小或内囊、外囊纤维完整性无显著相关性,但与桥脑小脑束完整性指数相关。特别招募的无酒精使用障碍并发症的 HIV 感染者存在桥脑小脑组织体积不足,并有功能后果。姿势稳定性和精神运动速度受损,至少部分归因于小脑下脑系统受损。