Latreille Véronique, Carrier Julie, Gaudet-Fex Benjamin, Rodrigues-Brazète Jessica, Panisset Michel, Chouinard Sylvain, Postuma Ronald B, Gagnon Jean-François
Centre for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Centre for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Brain. 2016 Apr;139(Pt 4):1189-99. doi: 10.1093/brain/aww018. Epub 2016 Feb 16.
In Parkinson's disease, electroencephalographic abnormalities during wakefulness and non-rapid eye movement sleep (spindles) were found to be predictive biomarkers of dementia. Because rapid eye movement sleep is regulated by the cholinergic system, which shows early degeneration in Parkinson's disease with cognitive impairment, anomalies during this sleep stage might mirror dementia development. In this prospective study, we examined baseline electroencephalographic absolute spectral power across three states of consciousness (non-rapid eye movement sleep, rapid eye movement sleep, and wakefulness) in 68 non-demented patients with Parkinson's disease and 44 healthy controls. All participants underwent baseline polysomnographic recordings and a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment. Power spectral analyses were performed on standard frequency bands. Dominant occipital frequency during wakefulness and ratios of slow-to-fast frequencies during rapid eye movement sleep and wakefulness were also computed. At follow-up (an average 4.5 years after baseline), 18 patients with Parkinson's disease had developed dementia and 50 patients remained dementia-free. In rapid eye movement sleep, patients with Parkinson's disease who later developed dementia showed, at baseline, higher absolute power in delta and theta bands and a higher slowing ratio, especially in temporal, parietal, and occipital regions, compared to patients who remained dementia-free and controls. In non-rapid eye movement sleep, lower baseline sigma power in parietal cortical regions also predicted development of dementia. During wakefulness, patients with Parkinson's disease who later developed dementia showed lower dominant occipital frequency as well as higher delta and slowing ratio compared to patients who remained dementia-free and controls. At baseline, higher slowing ratios in temporo-occipital regions during rapid eye movement sleep were associated with poor performance on visuospatial tests in patients with Parkinson's disease. Using receiver operating characteristic curves, we found that best predictors of dementia in Parkinson's disease were rapid eye movement sleep slowing ratios in posterior regions, wakefulness slowing ratios in temporal areas, and lower dominant occipital frequency. These results suggest that electroencephalographic slowing during sleep is a new promising predictive biomarker for Parkinson's disease dementia, perhaps as a marker of cholinergic denervation.
在帕金森病中,清醒和非快速眼动睡眠(纺锤波)期间的脑电图异常被发现是痴呆症的预测性生物标志物。由于快速眼动睡眠受胆碱能系统调节,而胆碱能系统在伴有认知障碍的帕金森病中早期就会退化,因此这个睡眠阶段的异常可能反映痴呆症的发展。在这项前瞻性研究中,我们检查了68名非痴呆帕金森病患者和44名健康对照者在三种意识状态(非快速眼动睡眠、快速眼动睡眠和清醒)下的基线脑电图绝对频谱功率。所有参与者都进行了基线多导睡眠图记录和全面的神经心理学评估。对标准频段进行了功率谱分析。还计算了清醒时的优势枕叶频率以及快速眼动睡眠和清醒时慢频率与快频率的比值。在随访时(基线后平均4.5年),18名帕金森病患者发展为痴呆症,50名患者仍未患痴呆症。在快速眼动睡眠中,与未患痴呆症的患者及对照组相比,后来发展为痴呆症的帕金森病患者在基线时,δ波和θ波频段的绝对功率更高,慢化率更高,尤其是在颞叶、顶叶和枕叶区域。在非快速眼动睡眠中,顶叶皮质区域较低的基线西格玛功率也预示着痴呆症的发展。在清醒状态下,与未患痴呆症的患者及对照组相比,后来发展为痴呆症的帕金森病患者显示出较低的优势枕叶频率以及较高的δ波和慢化率。在基线时,帕金森病患者快速眼动睡眠期间颞枕区域较高的慢化率与视觉空间测试表现不佳有关。使用受试者工作特征曲线,我们发现帕金森病痴呆症的最佳预测指标是后部区域的快速眼动睡眠慢化率、颞叶区域的清醒慢化率以及较低的优势枕叶频率。这些结果表明,睡眠期间脑电图慢化是帕金森病痴呆症一个新的有前景的预测性生物标志物,可能作为胆碱能去神经支配的标志物。