학술논문

Evidence for a novel subcortical mechanism for posterior cingulate cortex atrophy in HIV peripheral neuropathy
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of NeuroVirology. 26(4)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Neurodegenerative
Peripheral Neuropathy
Pain Research
Chronic Pain
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Neurological
Adult
Aged
Atrophy
Brain Mapping
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Gyrus Cinguli
HIV
HIV Infections
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Neuralgia
Paresthesia
Peripheral Nervous System Diseases
Thalamus
White Matter
Brain
Imaging
Peripheral neuropathy
CHARTER Group
Medical Microbiology
Virology
Clinical sciences
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
We previously reported that neuropathic pain was associated with smaller posterior cingulate cortical (PCC) volumes, suggesting that a smaller/dysfunctional PCC may contribute to development of pain via impaired mind wandering. A gap in our previous report was lack of evidence for a mechanism for the genesis of PCC atrophy in HIV peripheral neuropathy. Here we investigate if volumetric differences in the subcortex for those with neuropathic paresthesia may contribute to smaller PCC volumes, potentially through deafferentation of ascending white matter tracts resulting from peripheral nerve damage in HIV neuropathy. Since neuropathic pain and paresthesia are highly correlated, statistical decomposition was used to separate pain and paresthesia symptoms to determine which regions of brain atrophy are associated with both pain and paresthesia and which are associated separately with pain or paresthesia. HIV+ individuals (N = 233) with and without paresthesia in a multisite study underwent structural brain magnetic resonance imaging. Voxel-based morphometry and a segmentation/registration tool were used to investigate regional brain volume changes associated with paresthesia. Analysis of decomposed variables found that smaller midbrain and thalamus volumes were associated with paresthesia rather than pain. However, atrophy in the PCC was related to both pain and paresthesia. Peak thalamic atrophy (p = 0.004; MNI x = - 14, y = - 24, z = - 2) for more severe paresthesia was in a region with reciprocal connections with the PCC. This provides initial evidence that smaller PCC volumes in HIV peripheral neuropathy are related to ascending white matter deafferentation caused by small fiber damage observed in HIV peripheral neuropathy.