Huang Hui-Chun, Chen Chun-Ming, Lu Ming-Kuei, Liu Bey-Ling, Li Chia-Ing, Chen Jui-Cheng, Wang Guei-Jane, Lin Hsiu-Chen, Duann Jeng-Ren, Tsai Chon-Haw
Graduate Institute of Clinical Medical Science, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.
Division of Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders, Department of Neurology, China Medical University Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2021 Sep 22;13:731332. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.731332. eCollection 2021.
Freezing of gait (FOG) in Parkinson's disease (PD) is a devastating clinical phenomenon that has a detrimental impact on patients. It tends to be triggered more often during turning (complex) than during forwarding straight (simple) walking. The neural mechanism underlying this phenomenon remains unclear and requires further elucidation. To investigate the differences in cerebral functional magnetic resonance imaging responses between PD patients with and without FOG during explicitly video-guided motor imagery (MI) of various complex (normal, freezing) and simple (normal, freezing) walking conditions. We recruited 34 PD patients, namely, 20 with FOG and 14 without FOG, and 15 normal controls. Participants underwent video-guided MI of turning and straight walking, with and without freezing, while their brain blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) activities were measured. Gait analysis was performed. While comparing FOG turning with FOG straight walking, freezers showed higher activation of the superior occipital gyrus, left precentral gyrus, and right postcentral gyrus compared with non-freezers. Normal controls also manifest similar findings compared with non-freezers, except no difference was noted in occipital gyrus activity between the two groups. Freezers also displayed a higher effect size in the locomotor regions than non-freezers during imagery of normal turning. Our findings suggest that freezers require a higher drive of cortical and locomotion regions to overcome the overinhibition of the pathways in freezers than in non-freezers. Compared with simple walking, increased dorsal visual pathway and deep locomotion region activities might play pivotal roles in tackling FOG in freezers during complex walking.
帕金森病(PD)中的冻结步态(FOG)是一种具有破坏性的临床现象,对患者有不利影响。它在转身(复杂)行走时比直线向前(简单)行走时更常引发。这种现象背后的神经机制尚不清楚,需要进一步阐明。为了研究在各种复杂(正常、冻结)和简单(正常、冻结)行走条件下明确的视频引导运动想象(MI)期间,有和没有FOG的PD患者之间脑功能磁共振成像反应的差异。我们招募了34名PD患者,即20名有FOG的患者和14名没有FOG的患者,以及15名正常对照者。参与者在有和没有冻结的情况下进行转身和直线行走的视频引导MI,同时测量他们的脑血氧水平依赖(BOLD)活动。进行了步态分析。在比较FOG转身与FOG直线行走时,与非冻结者相比,冻结者在枕上回、左侧中央前回和右侧中央后回表现出更高的激活。与非冻结者相比,正常对照者也表现出类似的结果,只是两组在枕叶活动上没有差异。在正常转身想象期间,冻结者在运动区域的效应大小也比非冻结者更高。我们的研究结果表明,与非冻结者相比,冻结者需要更高的皮质和运动区域驱动来克服冻结者通路的过度抑制。与简单行走相比,增加的背侧视觉通路和深部运动区域活动可能在复杂行走期间应对冻结者的FOG中起关键作用。