Journal article

Neurovascular Coupling in Parkinson's Disease Patients: Effects of Dementia and Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor Treatment


Authors listRosengarten, Bernhard; Dannhardt, Veren; Burr, Ole; Poehler, Matthias; Rosengarten, Susanne; Oechsner, Matthias; Reuter, Iris

Publication year2010

Pages415-421

JournalJournal of Alzheimer's Disease

Volume number22

Issue number2

ISSN1387-2877

eISSN1875-8908

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-2010-101140

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) lead to a cholinergic deficit in the brain which is not only related to dementia, but may also lead to a disturbed neurovascular coupling. We investigated the effect of cholinergic decline on neurovascular coupling in PD patients. Patients with idiopathic PD were divided in groups without (n = 59; 65 +/- 9 y) or with moderate dementia as specified by Mini-Mental State Examination. The demented patients were assigned to groups with (n = 55; 73 +/- 6 y) or without (n = 61; 72 +/- 8 y) acetylcholinesterase inhibitor treatment. Neurovascular coupling was assessed by a simultaneous electroencephalography-Doppler technique applying a contrast-based visual stimulation task. Visually evoked potential amplitudes (N75-P100) and parameters of the hemodynamic response in the posterior cerebral artery were obtained using a control system approach (resting flow velocity, gain, attenuation, rate time, and natural frequency). Data were compared to a healthy control group of a similar age range (n = 20; 63 +/- 8 yr). Compared to controls, patient groups presented no differences in evoked potential amplitudes or neurovascular coupling parameters. The reported 30% decline in acetylcholinesterase activity in PD patients did not lead to measurable changes in neurovascular coupling. In AD patients additional factors might explain the uncoupling and higher cerebrovascular risk detected in clinical studies.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleRosengarten, B., Dannhardt, V., Burr, O., Poehler, M., Rosengarten, S., Oechsner, M., et al. (2010) Neurovascular Coupling in Parkinson's Disease Patients: Effects of Dementia and Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor Treatment, Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 22(2), pp. 415-421. https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-2010-101140

APA Citation styleRosengarten, B., Dannhardt, V., Burr, O., Poehler, M., Rosengarten, S., Oechsner, M., & Reuter, I. (2010). Neurovascular Coupling in Parkinson's Disease Patients: Effects of Dementia and Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor Treatment. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. 22(2), 415-421. https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-2010-101140



Keywords


cerebral blood flowfunctional activationLEWY BODY DISEASEneurovascular couplingParkinson's diseaseVISUAL HALLUCINATIONSvisually evoked potential

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:43