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- Marissa Ong, Heidi Foo, Russell Jude Chander, Ming-Ching Wen, Wing Lok Au, Yih Yian Sitoh, Louis Tan, and Nagaendran Kandiah.
- Department of Neurology, National Neuroscience Institute, Singapore.
- J. Neurol. Sci. 2017 Jun 15; 377: 122-126.
ObjectiveTo investigate the impact of diabetes mellitus (DM) on cognitive performance and longitudinal volumetric brain changes in a cohort of cognitively normal mild PD patients.MethodsProspective study of idiopathic PD subjects who underwent baseline and follow-up MRI imaging and neuropsychological assessments at 6month intervals for 3years. Subjects were classified based on the presence (PD-DM) or absence of DM (PD-No DM) at baseline. Volumetric analysis was performed using FreeSurfer 5.3 image analysis suite. Brain volume and cognition were compared and analyzed cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Analyses were corrected for intracranial volume.ResultsThere were 65 PD-no DM and 12 PD-DM subjects at baseline with comparable global cognition at baseline. PD-DM subjects had lower cortical grey matter (GM), amygdala, frontal white matter and temporal white matter volumes and higher total white matter hyperintensity and periventricular hyperintensities. After mean follow-up of 29.08months, there were 51 PD-no DM and 11 PD-DM subjects. PD-DM subjects demonstrated greater decline in MMSE and MOCA scores compared to PD-No DM. PD-DM subjects had a higher rate of atrophy in the cortical WM, particularly in the parietal and occipital white matter.ConclusionMild PD patients with DM have lower GM and WM volumes at baseline and higher WMH volumes, despite comparable cognitive scores. Longitudinally, DM in PD results in greater rate of cognitive decline, associated with higher WM atrophy.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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