Cognitive impairment and its neuroimaging correlates in spinocerebellar ataxia 2.

2021 
INTRODUCTION Cognitive impairment (CI) is reported but is poorly explored in spinocerebellar ataxia 2 (SCA2). This study was undertaken to evaluate and classify cognitive impairment in patients with SCA2 and to identify their grey matter (GM) correlates. METHODS We evaluated the neurocognitive profile of 35 SCA2 and 30 age-, gender- and education-matched healthy controls using tests for attention, executive functions, learning and memory, language and fluency, and visuomotor constructive ability. Patients were classified into SCA2 with and without CI based on normative data from population and healthy controls. Furthermore, patients with CI were sub-classified based on the number of impaired domains into multi-domain CI (≥3 domains; MDCI) and limited domain CI (≤2 domains; LDCI). The underlying GM changes were identified using voxel based morphometry. RESULTS The mean age at onset, duration of disease, and ataxia score was 28.7 ± 8.51 years, 66.7 ± 44.1 months, and 16.1 ± 4.9 points, respectively. CI was present in 71.4% of SCA2 subjects (MDCI: 42.7%; LDCI: 28.5%). Patients with CI had significant atrophy of the posterior cerebellum, sensorimotor cortex, and superior frontal gyrus (FWE p-value <0.05). Patients with MDCI had significant GM atrophy of the angular gyrus compared to LDCI (FWE p-value <0.05). CONCLUSION Patients with CI had significant GM involvement of the posterior cerebellum and frontal lobe, suggestive of impairment in the cerebello-fronto-cortical circuitry.
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