Abstract
Background
Patients with tremor-dominant Parkinson’s disease (PD) have slower disease progression, show less cognitive decline, and have more favorable outcomes than patients with non-tremor PD. However, the pathophysiology of PD tremor remains unclear. Whether there are differences in nigrostriatal dopaminergic dysfunction between the two PD subtypes is unknown.
Purpose
To evaluate the differences in regional dopamine transporter (DAT) density in the brain between different subtypes of early PD using FP-CIT PET/CT.
Material and Methods
We recruited 43 patients with PD (21 tremor-dominant PD [TP] and 22 non-tremor-dominant PD [NTP]) and 18 age-matched healthy controls. All patients with PD underwent FP-CIT PET/CT imaging and evaluated Parkinsonian motor severity by using the Hoehn and Yahr stage and Part III of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). We also compared tremor and non-tremor symptoms with motor phenotype scores between two subtypes of PD.
Results
All patients with PD demonstrated a significantly decreased FP-CIT uptake in the putamen compared to healthy controls. Differences in putamen FP-CIT uptake versus caudate nucleus FP-CIT uptake in PD showed putamen uptake was significantly more impaired than that in the caudate nucleus. However, there was no significant difference in FP-CIT uptake in the striatum between both PD groups at the same early stage of disease.
Conclusion
We suggest that differential of DAT uptake in the striatum did not allow for a reliable separation of subtypes into tremor-dominant and non-tremor-dominant, especially in the early stages of PD. Therefore, we assumed that many systems besides the nigrostriatal dopaminergic system are involved in the generation of tremors in PD.
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