Ozawa Masakazu, Murakami Hidetomo, Muraoka Yuichiro, Ibukuro Momoyo, Shiraishi Tomotaka, Onda Asako, Matsuno Hiromasa, Bono Keiko, Umehara Tadashi, Omoto Shusaku, Okano Hirotaka James, Iguchi Yasuyuki
Department of Neurology, The Jikei University School of Medicine, 3-25-8 Nishi-Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-8461, Japan; Division of Regenerative Medicine, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Neurology, The Jikei University School of Medicine, 3-25-8 Nishi-Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 105-8461, Japan; Department of Neurology, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Sleep Med. 2025 May;129:82-88. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2025.02.031. Epub 2025 Feb 21.
Sleep disturbance (SD) is common in Parkinson's disease (PD) and adversely affect the quality of life (QOL). Although dopamine dysfunction has been implicated, the specific role of dopaminergic activity in SD among patients with PD remains unclear. Given that dopamine-related medications can affect sleep, it is essential to assess SD in drug-naïve patients. This study investigated the association between SD and uptake of striatal dopamine transporters using Dopamine Transporter Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography with I-Ioflupane (DAT-SPECT).
We retrospectively analyzed 112 drug-naïve patients through the PD Sleep Scale-version-2 (PDSS-2) and DAT-SPECT. Patients were divided into SD and non-SD groups using a PDSS-2 cut-off score of 15. The Mann-Whitney U test and binomial regression were used to compare the groups.
SD was identified in 47.3 % of participants, correlating significantly with increased age, more severe motor symptoms, cognitive decline, depressive symptoms, and reduced QOL scores. Binomial regression analyses-adjusted for sex, age, motor dysfunction, cognitive function, and nocturnal autonomic cardiovascular dysfunction-showed that reduced DAT-SPECT uptake in the left anterior and posterior putamen significantly contributed to higher PDSS-2 scores.
This study demonstrated a link between SD and putamen DAT-SPECT uptake in drug-naïve patients with PD, indicating the role of dopamine in sleep regulation. These findings underscore the importance of managing SD in patients with PD to improve QOL and suggest the need for further investigation of the impact of dopaminergic dysfunction on sleep.
睡眠障碍(SD)在帕金森病(PD)中很常见,会对生活质量(QOL)产生不利影响。尽管多巴胺功能障碍被认为与之有关,但多巴胺能活性在PD患者睡眠障碍中的具体作用仍不清楚。鉴于多巴胺相关药物会影响睡眠,在未服用药物的患者中评估睡眠障碍至关重要。本研究使用123I-碘氟潘多巴胺转运体单光子发射计算机断层扫描(DAT-SPECT)研究了睡眠障碍与纹状体多巴胺转运体摄取之间的关联。
我们通过帕金森病睡眠量表第2版(PDSS-2)和DAT-SPECT对112例未服用药物的患者进行了回顾性分析。使用PDSS-2临界值15将患者分为睡眠障碍组和非睡眠障碍组。采用曼-惠特尼U检验和二项式回归对两组进行比较。
47.3%的参与者存在睡眠障碍,这与年龄增加、运动症状更严重、认知衰退、抑郁症状以及生活质量得分降低显著相关。经性别、年龄、运动功能障碍、认知功能和夜间自主心血管功能障碍校正的二项式回归分析表明,左前、后壳核DAT-SPECT摄取减少显著导致PDSS-2得分升高。
本研究证明了未服用药物的PD患者睡眠障碍与壳核DAT-SPECT摄取之间的联系,表明多巴胺在睡眠调节中的作用。这些发现强调了管理PD患者睡眠障碍以改善生活质量的重要性,并表明需要进一步研究多巴胺能功能障碍对睡眠的影响。