Su Dongning, Ji Lanxin, Cui Yusha, Gan Lu, Ma Huizi, Liu Zhu, Duan Yunyun, Stoessl A Jon, Zhou Junhong, Wu Tao, Liu Yaou, Feng Tao
Center for Movement Disorders, Department of Neurology, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
China National Clinical Research Center for Neurological Diseases, Beijing, China.
Mov Disord. 2025 Jun;40(6):1112-1122. doi: 10.1002/mds.30146. Epub 2025 Feb 25.
Freezing of gait (FOG) is a common gait disorder that often accompanies Parkinson's disease (PD). The current understanding of brain functional organization in FOG was built on the assumption that the functional connectivity (FC) of networks is static, but FC changes dynamically over time. We aimed to characterize the dynamic functional connectivity (DFC) in patients with FOG based on high temporal-resolution functional MRI (fMRI).
Eighty-seven PD patients, including 29 with FOG and 58 without FOG, and 32 healthy controls underwent resting-state fMRI. Spatial independent component analysis and a sliding-window approach were used to estimate DFC.
Four patterns of structured FC 'states' were identified: a frequent and sparsely connected network (State I), a less frequent but highly synchronized network (State IV), and two states with opposite connecting directions between the visual network and the sensorimotor network (positively connected in State II, negatively connected in State III). Compared with the non-FOG group, patients with FOG spent significantly less time in State II and more time in State III. The longer dwell time in State III was correlated with more severe FOG symptoms. The fractional window of State III tended to correlate to visual-spatial and executive dysfunction in FOG. Moreover, fewer transitions between brain states and lower variability in local efficiency were observed in FOG, suggesting a relatively 'rigid' brain.
This study highlights how visuomotor network dynamics are related to the presence and severity of FOG in PD patients, which provides new insights into understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms that underly FOG. © 2025 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
冻结步态(FOG)是一种常见的步态障碍,常伴随帕金森病(PD)出现。目前对FOG脑功能组织的理解基于网络功能连接(FC)是静态的这一假设,但FC会随时间动态变化。我们旨在基于高时间分辨率功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来描述FOG患者的动态功能连接(DFC)。
87例PD患者,包括29例有FOG的患者和58例无FOG的患者,以及32名健康对照者接受静息态fMRI检查。采用空间独立成分分析和滑动窗口方法来估计DFC。
识别出四种结构化FC“状态”模式:一种频繁且连接稀疏的网络(状态I)、一种频率较低但高度同步的网络(状态IV),以及视觉网络和感觉运动网络之间连接方向相反的两种状态(状态II中正向连接,状态III中负向连接)。与无FOG组相比,有FOG的患者在状态II的时间显著减少,而在状态III的时间更多。状态III中较长的停留时间与更严重的FOG症状相关。状态III的分数窗口往往与FOG中的视觉空间和执行功能障碍相关。此外,在FOG中观察到脑状态之间的转换较少,局部效率的变异性较低,表明大脑相对“僵化”。
本研究突出了视觉运动网络动力学与PD患者中FOG的存在和严重程度之间的关系,这为理解FOG背后的病理生理机制提供了新的见解。© 2025国际帕金森和运动障碍协会。