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Reduced amygdala volumes are related to motor and cognitive signs in Huntington's disease: The IMAGE-HD study

Authors :
Lotta M. Ahveninen
Nellie Georgiou-Karistianis
Julie C. Stout
Valentina Lorenzetti
Yifat Glikmann-Johnston
Source :
NeuroImage : Clinical, NeuroImage: Clinical, Vol 18, Iss, Pp 881-887 (2018), NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2018.

Abstract

In Huntington's disease (HD), the presence of neurodegeneration in brain regions other than the striatum has been recently gaining attention. The amygdala is one such area, which has been investigated in only eight structural magnetic resonance imaging studies to date, but with inconsistent findings. This is the largest MRI study to date examining manually traced amygdala volumes in HD participants and the relationship of amygdala volumes to clinical measures of HD. Our study included 35 healthy control participants, and groups of 35 pre-symptomatic, and 36 symptomatic HD participants. When comparing the pre-symptomatic and symptomatic HD groups together against the control group, amygdala volumes were significantly lower in HD than controls and in symptomatic HD than pre-symptomatic HD. When examining relationships between amygdala volumes and clinical measures of HD, significantly smaller amygdala volumes were associated with worse motor and cognitive signs. For pre-symptomatic HD participants who were close to disease onset, smaller amygdala volumes were also associated with higher levels of anxiety symptoms. These findings suggest that the amygdala is affected in pre-symptomatic and symptomatic HD, and that the amygdala is related to the clinical profile of HD before onset of motor symptoms.<br />Highlights • Volume loss in the amygdala begins in HD before motor diagnosis. • Greater degree of amygdala volume loss occurs after HD diagnosis. • Amygdala volume loss is related to motor and cognitive symptoms in HD. • Smaller amygdala is related to high level anxiety in close to onset pre-manifest HD. • Abnormalities in extra-striatal structures contribute to clinical aspects of HD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22131582
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage : Clinical
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fd211f707371611b238473992081ab8