Ffytche Dominic H, Pereira Joana B, Ballard Clive, Chaudhuri K Ray, Weintraub Daniel, Aarsland Dag
KCL-PARCOG Group, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Department of Old Age Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2017 Apr;88(4):325-331. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2016-314832.
Parkinson's Disease (PD) psychosis refers to the spectrum of illusions, formed hallucinations and delusions that occur in PD. Visual hallucinations and illusions are thought to be caused by specific cognitive and higher visual function deficits and patients who develop such symptoms early in the disease course have greater rates of cognitive decline and progression to dementia. To date, no studies have investigated whether such deficits are found prior to the onset of PD psychosis.
Here we compare baseline cognitive, biomarker (structural imaging and cerebrospinal fluid) and other PD psychosis risk factor data in patients who go on to develop illusions or hallucinations within 3-4 years of follow-up in the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative cohort of newly diagnosed PD.
Of n=423 patients with PD, n=115 (27%) reported predominantly illusions with the median time of onset at 19.5 months follow-up. At study entry these patients had reduced CSF amyloid Aß, lower olfaction scores, higher depression scores and increased REM sleep behaviour disorder symptoms compared to patients without early onset PD psychosis but no differences in cognitive, higher visual or structural imaging measures. A subset of patients with early onset formed hallucinations (n=21) had reduced higher visual function at baseline, cortical thinning in parietal, occipital and frontal cortex and reduced hippocampal volume.
The findings suggest early onset illusions and formed hallucinations are linked to amyloid pathology in PD and point to a difference in the underlying pathophysiological mechanism of illusions and formed hallucinations, with implications for their respective links to future cognitive decline.
帕金森病(PD)精神病是指在PD中出现的幻觉、成型幻觉和妄想等一系列症状。视幻觉和错觉被认为是由特定的认知和高级视觉功能缺陷引起的,在疾病病程早期出现这些症状的患者认知衰退和发展为痴呆的发生率更高。迄今为止,尚无研究调查在PD精神病发作之前是否存在此类缺陷。
在此,我们比较了帕金森病进展标志物倡议队列中新诊断的PD患者在随访3 - 4年内出现错觉或幻觉的患者的基线认知、生物标志物(结构成像和脑脊液)及其他PD精神病风险因素数据。
在n = 423例PD患者中,n = 115例(27%)主要报告了错觉,中位发病时间为随访19.5个月时。与无早期发作PD精神病的患者相比,在研究入组时,这些患者脑脊液淀粉样蛋白Aβ降低、嗅觉评分较低、抑郁评分较高且快速眼动睡眠行为障碍症状增加,但在认知、高级视觉或结构成像测量方面无差异。一部分早期发作形成幻觉的患者(n = 21)在基线时高级视觉功能降低,顶叶、枕叶和额叶皮质变薄,海马体积减小。
研究结果表明,早期发作的错觉和形成的幻觉与PD中的淀粉样蛋白病理相关,并指出错觉和形成的幻觉在潜在病理生理机制上存在差异,这对它们各自与未来认知衰退的关联具有启示意义。