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. 2023 Aug 15;101(7):e754-e763.
doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207497. Epub 2023 Jul 12.

Effects of Cerebrovascular and Lewy Body Pathology on Parkinsonian Signs in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Affiliations

Effects of Cerebrovascular and Lewy Body Pathology on Parkinsonian Signs in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Sonal Agrawal et al. Neurology. .

Abstract

Background and objectives: The roles of Lewy body (LB) and separately of cerebrovascular disease (CVD) pathologies in the severity of parkinsonian signs are well recognized in old age. We investigated whether the 2 pathologies act synergistically to further potentiate the severity of parkinsonism beyond their separate effects.

Methods: We used postmortem data of decedents from 3 longitudinal community-based studies of aging who underwent annual clinical evaluation to assess parkinsonian signs using 26 items of the motor portion of a modified Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale. A summary score was developed from each item score to construct a global parkinsonian score, with a higher score indicating more severe parkinsonism. A detailed neuropathologic evaluation was performed to identify LB, Alzheimer disease pathology, nigral neuronal loss, atherosclerosis, macroscopic infarcts, and other CVD pathologies (arteriolosclerosis, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and microscopic infarcts). A series of regression models with terms for LB, CVD pathology, and the interaction of LB with CVD pathologies was fit for global parkinsonism proximate to death and for individual parkinsonian signs scores including, parkinsonian gait, rigidity, tremor, and bradykinesia.

Results: In 1,753 participants (mean age at death = 89 years; 68% women), LB was observed in 26% of participants, and CVD pathologies were present in more than two-thirds of participants. LB and 3 CVD pathologies (atherosclerosis, arteriolosclerosis, and macroscopic infarcts) were each independently associated with the severity of global parkinsonism proximate to death (LB: β = 0.318, SE = 0.08, p < 0.001; atherosclerosis: β = 0.373, SE = 0.079, p < 0.001; arteriolosclerosis: β = 0.253, SE = 0.078, p = 0.001; macroscopic infarcts: β = 0.333, SE = 0.077, p < 0.001). A linear regression model adjusted for demographics, CVD, and neurodegenerative pathologies showed interaction between LB and macroscopic infarcts (β = 0.463, SE = 0.168, p = 0.006), with LBs being associated with worse global parkinsonism when macroinfarcts are present. Similar interactions were found for atherosclerosis and LBs (β = 0.371, SE = 0.173, p = 0.032) and for parkinsonian gait as the outcome (macroscopic infarcts: β = 0.662, SE = 0.239, p = 0.005; atherosclerosis: β = 0.509, SE = 0.246, p = 0.038). Findings were not affected when the 66 participants with a clinical diagnosis of Parkinson disease were excluded. By contrast, there were no interactions between LB and other CVD pathologies or between atherosclerosis and macroscopic infarcts for global parkinsonism proximate to death.

Discussion: These findings suggest that atherosclerosis and macroscopic infarcts interact with LB pathology to increase the severity of parkinsonism beyond their additive effects in older persons.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no relevant disclosures. Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Relation of LB and Large Vessel Pathologies to Parkinsonism Before Death
These figures illustrate the synergy of LB findings with each of these vascular pathologies. The effect associated with LBs is very different, depending on which of these 2 vascular pathologies are seen. The effect associated with Lewy bodies is small when neither of the large vascular pathologies (atherosclerosis and macroscopic infarcts) are present (A), moderate when exactly one is present (B and C), and larger when both of these large vascular pathologies are present (D).

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