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Sleep Disturbance May Alter White Matter and Resting State Functional Connectivities in Parkinson's Disease

Authors
Chung, Seok JongChoi, Yong-HoKwon, HunkiPark, Yeong-HunYun, Hyuk JinYoo, Han SooMoon, Seock HyeonYe, Byoung SeokSohn, Young H.Lee, Jong MinLee, Phil Hyu
Issue Date
Mar-2017
Publisher
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine
Keywords
Parkinson's disease; sleep disturbance; cognition; white matter; functional connectivity
Citation
Sleep, v.40, no.3
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Sleep
Volume
40
Number
3
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/152772
DOI
10.1093/sleep/zsx009
ISSN
0161-8105
1550-9109
Abstract
Study Objectives: To clarify whether sleep disturbance would alter the patterns of structural and functional networks underlying cognitive dysfunction in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Methods: Among the 180 patients with nondemented PD in our cohort, 45 patients were classified as the group with sleep disturbance according to the 5-item scales for outcomes in Parkinson's disease nighttime scale. Based on propensity scores, another 45 PD patients without sleep disturbance were matched to this group. We performed a comparative analysis of cortical thickness, diffusion tensor imaging-based white matter integrity, resting-state functional connectivity, and cognitive performance between PD patients with and without sleep disturbance. Results: PD patients with sleep disturbance showed poorer performance in attention and working memory and a tendency toward a lower score in frontal executive function relative to those without sleep disturbance. The PD with sleep disturbance group exhibited widespread white matter disintegration compared to the PD without sleep disturbance group, although there were no significant differences in cortical thickness between the PD subgroups. On functional network analysis, PD patients with sleep disturbance exhibited less severely decreased cortical functional connectivity within the default mode network, central executive network, and dorsal attention network when compared to those without sleep disturbance. Conclusions: The present study suggests that sleep disturbance in PD patients could be associated with white matter and functional network alterations in conjunction with cognitive impairment.
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