Parkinson's Disease Research Clinic, Brain and Mind Centre, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia.
Dementia and Movement Disorders Laboratory, Brain and Mind Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2019 May;40(7):2055-2064. doi: 10.1002/hbm.24506. Epub 2019 Jan 13.
Freezing of gait (FOG) in Parkinson's disease (PD) is frequently triggered upon passing through narrow spaces such as doorways. However, despite being common the neural mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are poorly understood. In our study, 19 patients who routinely experience FOG performed a previously validated virtual reality (VR) gait paradigm where they used foot-pedals to navigate a series of doorways. Patients underwent testing randomised between both their "ON" and "OFF" medication states. Task performance in conjunction with blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal changes between "ON" and "OFF" states were compared within each patient. Specifically, as they passed through a doorway in the VR environment patients demonstrated significantly longer "footstep" latencies in the OFF state compared to the ON state. As seen clinically in FOG this locomotive delay was primarily triggered by narrow doorways rather than wide doorways. Functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed that footstep prolongation on passing through doorways was associated with selective hypoactivation in the presupplementary motor area (pSMA) bilaterally. Task-based functional connectivity analyses revealed that increased latency in response to doorways was inversely correlated with the degree of functional connectivity between the pSMA and the subthalamic nucleus (STN) across both hemispheres. Furthermore, increased frequency of prolonged footstep latency was associated with increased connectivity between the bilateral STN. These findings suggest that the effect of environmental cues on triggering FOG reflects a degree of impaired processing within the pSMA and disrupted signalling between the pSMA and STN, thus implicating the "hyperdirect" pathway in the generation of this phenomenon.
冻结步态(FOG)是帕金森病(PD)患者常见的一种症状,通常在穿过狭窄的空间(如门道)时会被触发。然而,尽管这种现象很常见,但背后的神经机制仍知之甚少。在我们的研究中,19 名经常经历 FOG 的患者进行了一项先前经过验证的虚拟现实(VR)步态范式测试,他们使用脚踏板在一系列门道中导航。患者在“开”药和“关”药状态下进行测试,两种状态下的任务表现和血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号变化进行了比较。具体来说,当患者在 VR 环境中穿过门道时,他们在“关”药状态下的“脚步”潜伏期明显长于“开”药状态。FOG 患者的临床症状表明,这种运动延迟主要是由狭窄的门道触发的,而不是由宽阔的门道触发的。功能性磁共振成像显示,在穿过门道时脚步延长与双侧预备运动区(pSMA)的选择性低激活有关。基于任务的功能连接分析显示,在响应门道时潜伏期的增加与 pSMA 和丘脑底核(STN)之间的功能连接程度呈负相关,这种负相关在两个半球都存在。此外,脚步潜伏期延长的频率增加与双侧 STN 之间的连接增加有关。这些发现表明,环境线索对触发 FOG 的影响反映了 pSMA 内处理能力的一定程度受损,以及 pSMA 和 STN 之间信号传递的中断,从而暗示了“直接通路”在该现象的产生中的作用。