Two-Year observational study of autonomic skin function in patients with Parkinson's disease compared to healthy individuals
Publikation: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift › Forschungsartikel › Beigetragen › Begutachtung
Beitragende
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We characterized autonomic pilomotor and sudomotor skin function in early Parkinson's disease (PD) longitudinally.
METHODS: We enrolled PD patients (Hoehn and Yahr 1-2) and healthy controls from movement disorder centers in Germany, Hungary, and the United States. We evaluated axon-reflex responses in adrenergic sympathetic pilomotor nerves and in cholinergic sudomotor nerves and assessed sympathetic skin response (SSR), predominantly parasympathetic neurocardiac function via heart rate variability, and disease-related symptoms at baseline, after 2 weeks, and after 1 and 2 years.
CLINICALTRIALS: gov: NCT03043768.
RESULTS: We included 38 participants: 26 PD (60% females, aged 62.4 ± 7.4 years, mean ± SD) and 12 controls (75% females, aged 59.5 ± 5.8 years). Pilomotor function was reduced in PD compared to controls at baseline when quantified via spatial axon-reflex spread (78 [43-143], median [interquartile range] mm2 vs. 175 [68-200] mm2 , p = 0.01) or erect hair follicle count in the axon-reflex region (8 [6-10] vs. 11 [6-16], p = 0.008) and showed reliability absent any changes from baseline to Week 2 (p = not significant [ns]). Between-group differences increased over the course of 2 years (p < 0.05), although no decline was observed within groups (p = ns). Pilomotor impairment in PD correlated with motor symptoms (rho = -0.59, p = 0.017) and was not lateralized (p = ns). Sudomotor axon-reflex and neurocardiac function did not differ between groups (p = ns), but SSR was reduced in PD (p = 0.0001).
CONCLUSIONS: Impairment of adrenergic sympathetic pilomotor function and SSR in evolving PD is not paralleled by changes to cholinergic sudomotor function and parasympathetic neurocardiac function, suggesting a sympathetic pathophysiology. A pilomotor axon-reflex test might be useful to monitor PD-related pathology.
Details
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Seiten (von - bis) | 1281-1292 |
Seitenumfang | 12 |
Fachzeitschrift | European journal of neurology |
Jahrgang | 30 |
Ausgabenummer | 5 |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - Mai 2023 |
Peer-Review-Status | Ja |
Externe IDs
Scopus | 85149658351 |
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Schlagworte
Schlagwörter
- Adrenergic Agents, Autonomic Nervous System, Autonomic Nervous System Diseases/etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Parkinson Disease/diagnosis, Reproducibility of Results, Skin/pathology