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Diagnostic value of micrographia in Parkinson's disease: a study with [I-123]FP-CIT SPECT

Kaasinen Valtteri; Nuuttila Simo; Jaakkola Elina; Levo Reeta; Murtomäki Kirsi; Scheperjans Filip; Ihalainen Toni; Lindholm Kari; Noponen Tommi; Joutsa Juho; Nojonen Tanja; Mertsalmi Tuomas; Mäkinen Elina; Vahlberg Tero; Eklund Mikael; Honkanen Emma A

Diagnostic value of micrographia in Parkinson's disease: a study with [I-123]FP-CIT SPECT

Kaasinen Valtteri
Nuuttila Simo
Jaakkola Elina
Levo Reeta
Murtomäki Kirsi
Scheperjans Filip
Ihalainen Toni
Lindholm Kari
Noponen Tommi
Joutsa Juho
Nojonen Tanja
Mertsalmi Tuomas
Mäkinen Elina
Vahlberg Tero
Eklund Mikael
Honkanen Emma A
Katso/Avaa
s00702-022-02517-1.pdf (790.0Kb)
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SPRINGER WIEN
doi:10.1007/s00702-022-02517-1
URI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00702-022-02517-1
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2022081154908
Tiivistelmä

Micrographia is a common symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD), and it may precede other motor symptoms. Despite the high prevalence of micrographia in PD, its neurobiological mechanisms are not known. Given that levodopa may alleviate consistent micrographia and that nondopaminergic essential tremor (ET) is not associated with micrographia, micrographia could possibly be used as an ancillary diagnostic method that reflects nigrostriatal dopamine function. We evaluated the usefulness of micrographia as a simple one-sentence writing test in differentiating PD from ET. A total of 146 PD patients, 42 ET patients and 38 healthy controls provided writing samples and were scanned with brain [123I]FP-CIT dopamine transporter (DAT) SPECT imaging with ROI-based and voxelwise analyses. The diagnostic accuracy of micrographia was evaluated and compared to that of DAT binding. Compared to ET and healthy controls, PD patients showed micrographia (consistent, 25.6% smaller area of handwriting sample in PD compared to ET, p = 0.002, and 27.2% smaller area of handwriting compared to healthy controls, p = 0.004). PD patients showed 133% more severe progressive micrographia compared with ET patients (median b = - 0.14 in PD, b = - 0.06 in ET, p = 0.021). In early unmedicated cognitively normal patients, consistent micrographia showed 71.2% specificity and 87.5% sensitivity in PD versus ET differentiation, but micrographia had no correlation with striatal or extrastriatal [123I]FP-CIT binding in patients with PD. The one-sentence micrographia test shows moderately good accuracy in PD versus ET differentiation. The severity of micrographia has no relationship with DAT binding, suggesting nondopaminergic mechanism of micrographia in PD. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02650843 (NMDAT study).

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