Odd H, Dore C, Eriksson S H, Heydrich L, Bargiotas P, Ashburner J, Lambert C
Functional Imaging Laboratory, Department of Imaging Neuroscience, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, UK.
Department of Clinical & Experimental Epilepsy, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, UK.
Neuroimage Clin. 2025;45:103751. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2025.103751. Epub 2025 Feb 7.
REM Sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD) is a parasomnia characterised by dream enactment behaviour due to loss of sleep atonia during REM sleep. It is of considerable interest as idiopathic RBD is strongly associated with a high risk of future α-synuclein disorders. Whilst candidate brainstem structures for sleep atonia have been identified in animal studies, the precise mechanisms underpinning RBD in humans remain unclear. Here, we set out to empirically define a candidate anatomical RBD network using lesion network mapping. Our objective was to test the hypothesis that RBD is either due to damage to canonical RBD nodes previously identified in the animal literature, or disruption to the white matter connections between these nodes, or as a consequence of damage to some other brains regions. All published cases of secondary RBD arising due to discrete brain lesions were reviewed and those providing sufficient detail to estimate the original lesion selected. This resulted in lesion masks for 25 unique RBD cases. These were combined to create a lesion probability map, demonstrating the area of maximal overlap. We also obtained MRI lesion masks for 15 pontine strokes that had undergone sleep polysomnography investigations confirming the absence of RBD. We subsequently used these as an exclusion mask and removed any intersecting voxels from the aforementioned region of maximal overlap, creating a single candidate region-of-interest (ROIs) within the pons. This remaining region overlapped directly with the locus coeruleus. As sleep atonia is unlikely to be lateralized, a contralateral ROI was created via a left-right flip, and both were warped to the 100 healthy adult Human Connectome dataset. Probabilistic tractography was run from each ROI to map and characterize the white-matter tracts and connectivity properties. All reported lesions were within the brainstem but there was significant variability in location. Only half of these intersected with at least one of the six a priori RBD anatomical nodes assessed, however 72 % directly intersected with the white matter tracts created from the region of maximum overlap pontine ROIs, and the remainder were within 3.05 mm (±1.51 mm) of these tracts. 92 % of lesions were either at the level of region of maximum overlap or caudal to it. These results suggest that RBD is a brainstem disconnection syndrome, where damage anywhere along the tract connecting the rostral locus coeruleus and medulla may result in failure of sleep atonia, in line with the animal literature. This implies idiopathic disease may emerge through different patterns of damage across this brainstem circuit. This observation may account for the both the paucity of brainstem neuroimaging results reported to date and the observed phenotypic variability seen in idiopathic RBD.
快速眼动睡眠行为障碍(RBD)是一种异态睡眠,其特征是在快速眼动睡眠期间由于肌张力缺失而出现梦境行为。它备受关注,因为特发性RBD与未来发生α-突触核蛋白病的高风险密切相关。虽然在动物研究中已确定了与睡眠肌张力缺失相关的候选脑干结构,但人类RBD的确切发病机制仍不清楚。在此,我们着手通过病变网络映射从经验上定义一个候选的RBD解剖学网络。我们的目的是检验这样一个假设,即RBD要么是由于先前在动物文献中确定的典型RBD节点受损,要么是这些节点之间的白质连接中断,要么是其他一些脑区受损的结果。我们回顾了所有已发表的因离散性脑损伤引起的继发性RBD病例,并选择了那些提供了足够细节以估计原始损伤的病例。这产生了25个独特RBD病例的病变掩码。将这些掩码合并以创建一个病变概率图,显示最大重叠区域。我们还获得了15例脑桥中风的MRI病变掩码,这些病例均接受了睡眠多导睡眠图检查,证实没有RBD。随后,我们将这些作为排除掩码,并从上述最大重叠区域中移除任何相交的体素,在脑桥内创建了一个单一的候选感兴趣区域(ROI)。这个剩余区域与蓝斑直接重叠。由于睡眠肌张力缺失不太可能是单侧性的,通过左右翻转创建了一个对侧ROI,并将两者都映射到100名健康成年人的人类连接组数据集。从每个ROI进行概率性纤维束成像,以绘制和表征白质纤维束及其连接特性。所有报告的病变都在脑干内,但位置存在显著差异。这些病变中只有一半与评估的六个先验RBD解剖节点中的至少一个相交,然而72%的病变直接与从脑桥ROI最大重叠区域创建的白质纤维束相交,其余病变位于这些纤维束的3.05毫米(±1.51毫米)范围内。92%的病变要么在最大重叠区域水平,要么在其尾侧。这些结果表明,RBD是一种脑干连接中断综合征,沿着连接头端蓝斑和延髓的纤维束任何部位受损都可能导致睡眠肌张力缺失失败这与动物文献一致。这意味着特发性疾病可能通过该脑干回路不同的损伤模式出现。这一观察结果可能解释了迄今为止报道的脑干神经影像学结果的匮乏以及特发性RBD中观察到的表型变异性。