Aims
Depression is commonly observed even in prodromal stages of Lewy body disorders (LBD), and is associated with cognitive impairment and a faster rate of cognitive decline. Given the role of dopamine in the development of movement disorders, but also in motivation and reward, we investigated neurodegenerative pathology in dopaminergic circuitry in Parkinson's disease (PD), PD with dementia (PDD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) patients in relation to depressive symptoms.
Methods
α‐synuclein, hyperphosphorylated tau and amyloid‐beta pathology was assessed in 17 DLB, 14 PDD and 8 PD cases within striatal and midbrain subregions, with neuronal cell density assessed in substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area. Additionally, we used a structural equation modeling (SEM) approach to investigate the extent to which brain connectivity might influence the deposition of pathological proteins within dopaminergic pathways.
Results
A significantly higher α‐synuclein burden was observed in the substantia nigra (P = 0.006), ventral tegmental area (P = 0.011) and nucleus accumbens (P = 0.031) in LBD patients with depression. Significant negative correlations were observed between cell density in substantia nigra with Lewy body (LB) Braak stage (P = 0.013), whereas cell density in ventral tegmental area showed negative correlations with LB Braak stage (P = 0.026) and neurofibrillary tangle Braak stage (P = 0.007).
Conclusions
Dopaminergic α‐synuclein pathology appears to drive depression. Selective targeting of dopaminergic pathways may therefore provide symptomatic relief for depressive symptoms in LBD patients.
AimsComplex visual hallucinations occur in 70% of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) cases and significantly affect patient well‐being. Visuo‐cortical and retinal abnormalities have been recorded in DLB and may play a role in visual hallucinations. The present study aimed to investigate the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), a visual relay centre between the retina and visual cortex, to see if changes to this structure underlie visual hallucinations in DLB.MethodsFifty‐one [17 probable DLB, 19 control and 15 probable Alzheimer's disease (AD)] cases were recruited for a functional magnetic resonance imaging study, in which patients' response to a flashing checkerboard stimulus was detected and measured in the LGN, before comparison across experimental groups. Additionally, post mortem
LGN tissue was acquired for a cross‐sectional study using 20 (six DLB, seven control and seven AD) cases and analysed using stereology. α‐Synuclein, phosphorylated tau and amyloid‐β pathology was also assessed in all cases.Results
DLB cases did not significantly differ from controls on neuroimaging, morphometry or pathology. However, a significant increase in amyloid‐β pathology, a reduction in number of parvocellular neurones and magnocellular gliosis was found in AD cases compared with control and DLB cases.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that the early visual system is relatively spared in DLB, which implies that upstream visual structures may be largely responsible for the generation of hallucinatory percepts. The significance of the degeneration of the LGN in AD cases is uncertain.
HighlightsParkinson’s disease (PD) may have an environmental component involving toxin exposure.Trichloroethylene (TCE) is a major environmental contaminant and can convert to the toxin TaClo.We administered TCE and TaClo to wild type and alpha-synuclein mutant mice as a model of PD.TCE and TaClo caused substantia nigra neurone loss but alpha-synuclein mutation was not additive.
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