» Articles » PMID: 28034996

A Fully Automated, Atlas-Based Approach for Superior Cerebellar Peduncle Evaluation in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy Phenotypes

Overview
Specialty Neurology
Date 2016 Dec 31
PMID 28034996
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background And Purpose: The superior cerebellar peduncle is damaged in progressive supranuclear palsy. However, alterations differ between progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome and progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism. In this study, we propose an automated tool for superior cerebellar peduncle integrity assessment and test its performance in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome, progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism, Parkinson disease, and healthy controls.

Materials And Methods: Structural and diffusion MRI was performed in 21 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome, 9 with progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism, 20 with Parkinson disease, and 30 healthy subjects. In a fully automated pipeline, the left and right superior cerebellar peduncles were first identified on MR imaging by using a tractography-based atlas of white matter tracts; subsequently, volume, mean diffusivity, and fractional anisotropy were extracted from superior cerebellar peduncles. These measures were compared across groups, and their discriminative power in differentiating patients was evaluated in a linear discriminant analysis.

Results: Compared with those with Parkinson disease and controls, patients with progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome showed alterations of all superior cerebellar peduncle metrics (decreased volume and fractional anisotropy, increased mean diffusivity). Patients with progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism had smaller volumes than those with Parkinson disease and controls and lower fractional anisotropy than those with Parkinson disease. Patients with progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome had significantly altered fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity in the left superior cerebellar peduncle compared with those with progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism. Discriminant analysis with the sole use of significant variables separated progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism from progressive supranuclear palsy with Richardson syndrome with 70% accuracy and progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism from Parkinson disease with 74% accuracy.

Conclusions: We demonstrate the feasibility of an automated approach for extracting multimodal MR imaging metrics from the superior cerebellar peduncle in healthy subjects and patients with parkinsonian. We provide evidence that structural and diffusion measures of the superior cerebellar peduncle might be valuable for computer-aided diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy subtypes and for differentiating patients with progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism from with those with Parkinson disease.

Citing Articles

Brainstem and cerebellar radiological findings in progressive supranuclear palsy.

Spiegel C, Marotta C, Bertram K, Vivash L, Harding I Brain Commun. 2025; 7(1):fcaf051.

PMID: 39958262 PMC: 11829206. DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf051.


Differentiating between common PSP phenotypes using structural MRI: a machine learning study.

Quattrone A, Sarica A, Buonocore J, Morelli M, Bianco M, Calomino C J Neurol. 2023; 270(11):5502-5515.

PMID: 37507502 PMC: 10576703. DOI: 10.1007/s00415-023-11892-y.


Clinical Spectrum of Tauopathies.

Olfati N, Shoeibi A, Litvan I Front Neurol. 2022; 13:944806.

PMID: 35911892 PMC: 9329580. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.944806.


Structural connectivity alterations in the motor network of patients with scans without evidence of dopaminergic deficit (SWEDD).

Caligiuri M, Quattrone A, Bianco M, Sarica A, Quattrone A J Neurol. 2022; 269(11):5926-5933.

PMID: 35794352 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-022-11259-9.


"Parkinson's disease" on the way to progressive supranuclear palsy: a review on PSP-parkinsonism.

Necpal J, Borsek M, Jelenova B Neurol Sci. 2021; 42(12):4927-4936.

PMID: 34532773 DOI: 10.1007/s10072-021-05601-8.


References
1.
Wang J, Wai Y, Lin W, Ng S, Wang C, Hsieh R . Microstructural changes in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy: a diffusion tensor imaging study. J Magn Reson Imaging. 2010; 32(1):69-75. DOI: 10.1002/jmri.22229. View

2.
Steele J, Richardson J, Olszewski J . PROGRESSIVE SUPRANUCLEAR PALSY. A HETEROGENEOUS DEGENERATION INVOLVING THE BRAIN STEM, BASAL GANGLIA AND CEREBELLUM WITH VERTICAL GAZE AND PSEUDOBULBAR PALSY, NUCHAL DYSTONIA AND DEMENTIA. Arch Neurol. 1964; 10:333-59. DOI: 10.1001/archneur.1964.00460160003001. View

3.
HOEHN M, Yahr M . Parkinsonism: onset, progression and mortality. Neurology. 1967; 17(5):427-42. DOI: 10.1212/wnl.17.5.427. View

4.
Hauw J, Daniel S, Dickson D, Horoupian D, Jellinger K, Lantos P . Preliminary NINDS neuropathologic criteria for Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome (progressive supranuclear palsy). Neurology. 1994; 44(11):2015-9. DOI: 10.1212/wnl.44.11.2015. View

5.
Tsuboi Y, Slowinski J, Josephs K, Honer W, Wszolek Z, Dickson D . Atrophy of superior cerebellar peduncle in progressive supranuclear palsy. Neurology. 2003; 60(11):1766-9. DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000068011.21396.f4. View