The body-first Parkinson’s disease (PD) hypothesis suggests initial gut Lewy body pathology initially propagates to the pons before reaching the substantia nigra, and subsequently progresses to the diencephalic and cortical levels, a disease course presumed to likely occur in PD with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD). We aimed to explore the potential association between colonic phosphorylated alpha-synuclein histopathology (PASH) and diencephalic or cortical dysfunction evidenced by non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and wakefulness polysomnographic markers.
In a study involving 43 patients with PD who underwent clinical examination, rectosigmoidoscopy, and polysomnography, we detected PASH on colonic biopsies using whole-mount immunostaining. We performed a visual semi-quantitative analysis of NREM sleep and wake electroencephalography (EEG), confirmed it with automated quantification of spindle and slow wave features of NREM sleep, and the wake dominant frequency, and then determined probable Arizona PD stage classifications based on sleep and wake EEG features.
The visual analysis aligned with the automated quantified spindle characteristics and the wake dominant frequency. Altered NREM sleep and wake parameters correlated with markers of PD severity, colonic PASH, and RBD diagnosis. Colonic PASH frequency also increased in parallel to probable Arizona PD stage classifications.
Colonic PASH is strongly associated with widespread brain sleep and wake dysfunction, suggesting an extensive diffusion of the pathologic process in PD. Visual and automated analyses of polysomnography signals provide useful markers to gauge covert brain dysfunction in PD.
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