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Title

Susceptibility map-weighted MRI can distinguish tremor-dominant Parkinson's disease from essential tremor.

Authors

Jo, Sungyang; Suh, Chong Hyun; Lee, Sangjin; Lee, Jihyun; Yoon, MyungKi; Heo, Hwon; Shim, Woo Hyun; Kim, Sang Joon; Kim, Eung Yeop; Chung, Sun Ju

Abstract

Distinguishing between Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET) can be challenging sometimes. Although positron emission tomography can confirm PD diagnosis, its application is limited by high cost and exposure to radioactive isotopes. Patients with PD exhibit loss of the dorsal nigral hyperintensity on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Novel MRI-based approaches, including susceptibility map-weighted imaging (SMwI), allow visualization of the dorsal nigral hyperintensity at an increased resolution. Herein, we investigated the diagnostic accuracy of dorsal nigral hyperintensity evaluation on SMwI for distinguishing tremor-dominant PD from ET. Consecutive patients with tremor who underwent SMwI and were diagnosed with tremor-dominant PD or ET between July 2021 and July 2022 were enrolled. The dorsal nigral hyperintensity loss on SMwI was compared between the PD and ET groups. All 143 patients (100%) with tremor-dominant PD showed unilateral or bilateral dorsal nigral hyperintensity loss. Among 136 patients with ET, 131 (96.3%) exhibited an intact dorsal nigral hyperintensity, while 5 (3.7%) showed unilateral/bilateral dorsal nigral hyperintensity loss. SMwI discriminated between tremor-dominant PD and ET with a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and 96.3%, respectively. 18F-FP-CIT PET revealed normal findings in 4/5 patients with ET who had false-positive results on SMwI. These results indicate that dorsal nigral hyperintensity loss on SMwI could differentiate between tremor-dominant PD and ET with high accuracy.

Subjects

PARKINSON'S disease; POSITRON emission tomography; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; ESSENTIAL tremor; RADIOISOTOPES

Publication

Scientific Reports, 2025, Vol 14, Issue 1, p1

ISSN

2045-2322

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/s41598-024-81089-4

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