Brain, Vol. 125, No. 11, 2431-2445,
November 2002
© 2002 Oxford University Press
Clinical correlates of selective pathology in the amygdala of patients with Parkinsons disease
Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute and University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Correspondence to: Dr Antony Harding, Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute, Barker Street, Randwick, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia E-mail: a.harding{at}unsw.edu.au
The amygdala exhibits significant pathological changes in Parkinsons disease, including atrophy and Lewy body (LB) formation. Amygdala pathology has been suggested to contribute to some clinical features of Parkinsons disease, including deficits of olfaction and facial expression. The degree of neuronal loss in amygdala subnuclei and the relationship with LB formation in non-demented Parkinsons disease cases have not been examined previously. Using stereological methods, the volume of neurones and the number of neurones in amygdala subdivisions were estimated in 18 prospectively studied, non-demented patients with Parkinsons disease and 16 age- and sex-matched controls. Careful exclusion (all cortical disease) and inclusion (non-demented, levodopa-responsive, idiopathic Parkinsons disease or controls) criteria were applied. Seven Parkinsons disease cases experienced well-formed visual hallucinations many years after disease onset, while nine Parkinsons disease cases and three controls were treated for depression. Anatomically, the amygdala was subdivided into the lateral nucleus, the basal (basolateral and basomedial) nuclei and the corticomedial (central, medial and cortical nuclei) complex. LB and Lewy neurites were identified by immunohistochemistry for
-synuclein and ubiquitin and were assessed semiquantitatively. LB were found throughout the amygdala in Parkinsons disease, being present in
4% of neurones. Total amygdala volume was reduced by 20% in Parkinsons disease (P = 0.02) and LB concentrated in the cortical and basolateral nuclei. Lewy neurites were present in most cases but did not correlate with any structural or functional variable. Amygdala volume loss was largely due to a 30% reduction in volume (P = 0.01) and the total estimated number of neurones (P = 0.007) in the corticomedial complex. The degree of neurone loss and the proportion of LB-containing neurones in the cortical nucleus within this complex were constant across Parkinsons disease cases and neither variable was related to disease duration (R2 < 0.03; P > 0.5). The cortical nucleus has major olfactory connections and its degeneration is likely to contribute to the early selective anosmia common in Parkinsons disease. There was a small reduction in neuronal density in the basolateral nucleus in all Parkinsons disease cases, but no consistent volume or cell loss within this region. However, the proportion of LB-containing neurones in the basolateral nucleus was nearly doubled in cases that exhibited visual hallucinations, suggesting that neuronal dysfunction in this nucleus contributes to this late clinical feature. Detailed quantitation of the other amygdala subdivisions failed to reveal any other substantial anomalies or any associations with depression. Thus, the impact of Parkinsons disease on the amygdala is highly selective and correlates with both early and late clinical features.
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