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Contact: Holly Korschun
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404-727-3990
Emory University Health Sciences Center

Parkinson's disease impacts brain's centers of touch and vision
Movement disorder affects more than just motor control
Although Parkinson's disease is most commonly viewed as a "movement
disorder," scientists have found that the disease also causes widespread
abnormalities in touch and vision Ð effects that have now been verified
using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the brain. The new
findings, by scientists at Emory University School of Medicine and Zhejiang
University Medical School in Hangzhou China, will be presented on Oct. 17 at
the Society for Neuroscience meeting in Atlanta.
Scientists studying Parkinson's disease (PD) previously have focused on the
brain's motor and premotor cortex, but not the somatosensory or the visual
cortex. But Emory neurologist Krish Sathian, MD, PhD, and colleagues had
earlier discovered, through tests of tactile ability, that PD patients have
sensory problems with touch. They designed a study using fMRI to investigate
the brain changes underlying these sensory abnormalities.
Dr. Sathian's research group studied six patients with moderately advanced
PD and six age-matched healthy controls. After documenting the typical
movement problems of PD and ruling out dementia and nerve problems in the PD
patients, they administered a common test of tactile ability to both groups,
asking the participants to use their fingers to distinguish the orientation
of ridges and grooves on plastic gratings. At the same time, they conducted
a brain-scanning study using fMRI. This technology measures activations of
neurons in different areas of the brain by means of variations in blood flow
as an individual does a particular task.
The fMRI scans showed that the PD patients had much less activation of the
somatosensory areas in the brain's cortex than did the healthy controls. The
scientists also were surprised to find similar widespread differences in the
visual cortex, although the task involved touch, not vision.
"Our finding that the visual cortex is affected in Parkinson's disease,
while surprising, makes sense given that our laboratory and many others have
shown previously that areas of the brain's visual cortex are intimately
involved in the sense of touch," Dr. Sathian notes. "Although the reasons
for this are uncertain, they may involve a process of mental visualization
of the tactile stimuli and may also reflect a multisensory capability of the
visual cortex."
Dr. Sathian believes the study shows that the traditional boundaries between
brain systems involved in touch and vision, and between those involved in
sensation and movement, are artificial constructs that break down with more
in-depth study. From a practical standpoint, it shows that patients with PD
and other movement disorders have considerable problems in addition to
movement control.
"These problems need to be appreciated in caring for these patients and in
designing newer strategies for treatment and rehabilitation," Dr. Sathian
emphasizes.

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