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Abstract #1108

Diffusion tractography and functional connectivity profiles of the dorsal raphe nucleus in Parkinson’s Disease with sleep symptoms

Wei-Jing Hsu1,2, Srijan Bhasin1,2,3, Poh Choo Seow2, Thomas Welton1,4, Septian Hartono1,2,4, Celeste Yan Teng Chen4, Weiling Lee2, Wilson Wong2, Louis Chew Seng Tan1,4, Eng King Tan1,4, and Ling Ling Chan1,2,4
1DukeNUS Medical School, Singapore, Singapore, 2Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore, 3Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States, 4National Neuroscience Institute, Singapore, Singapore

Synopsis

Keywords: Functional Connectivity, fMRI (resting state), Parkinson's disease, Dorsal Raphe Nucleus, Sleep disturbance, correlational tractography

Motivation: The role of the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) in sleep related pathologies in Parkinson’s disease (PD) remains under investigated.

Goal(s): To characterize functional connectivity patterns and correlational structural tractography changes specific to the DRN in PD and sleep-related symptoms.

Approach: Resting-state functional MRI and diffusion spectrum MRI metrics were compared across PD patients and healthy controls experiencing severe sleep disturbances.

Results: We found changes in functional connectivity profiles of the DRN and findings suggesting axonal damage that showed stronger correlation with sleep symptoms in healthy controls compared to patients, implying potentially distinct pathophysiological mechanisms in symptom development.

Impact: Clarifying involvement of the dorsal raphe nucleus and serotonergic pathways in the pathogenesis of sleep symptoms in Parkinson’s Disease may contribute to development of novel therapies targeted toward specific dysfunctional pathways involved in this quality-of-life disturbing condition.

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Keywords