Thalamic volume mediates associations between cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2max) and cognition in Parkinson’s Disease

2021 
Abstract Introduction Cognitive deficits occur in Parkinson’s disease (PD). Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is associated with better cognitive performance in aging especially in executive function (EF) and memory. The association between CRF and cognitive performance is understudied in people with PD. Brain structures underlying associations also remains unknown. This cross-sectional study examined the associations between CRF and cognitive performance in PD. We also examined associations between CRF and brain structures impacted in PD. Mediation analysis were conducted to examine whether brain structures impacted in PD mediate putative associations between CRF and cognitive performance. Methods Individuals with PD (N=33) underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), CRF evaluation (estimated VO2max), and neuropsychological assessment. Composite cognitive scores of episodic memory, EF, attention, language, and visuospatial functioning were generated. Structural equation models were constructed to examine whether MRI volume estimates (thalamus and pallidum) mediated associations between CRF and cognitive performance (adjusting for age, education, PD disease duration, sex, MDS-UPDRS motor score, and total intracranial volume). Results Higher CRF was associated with better episodic memory (Standardized β=0.391; p=0.008), EF (Standardized β=0.324; p=0.025), and visuospatial performance (Standardized β=0.570; p=0.005). Higher CRF was associated with larger thalamic (Standardized β=0.722; p=0.004) and pallidum (Standardized β=0.635; p=0.004) volumes. Thalamic volume mediated the association between higher CRF and better EF (Indirect effect=0.309) and episodic memory (Indirect effect=0.209) performance (p Conclusion The thalamus plays an important role in the association between CRF and both EF and episodic memory in PD.
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