Abstract

In cervical dystonia, functional MRI (fMRI) evidence indicates changes in several resting state networks, which revert in part following the botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT) therapy. Recently, the involvement of the cerebellum in dystonia has gained attention. The aim of our study was to compare connectivity between cerebellar subdivisions and the rest of the brain before and after BoNT treatment. Seventeen patients with cervical dystonia indicated for treatment with BoNT were enrolled (14 female, aged 50.2 ± 8.5 years, range 38–63 years). Clinical and fMRI examinations were carried out before and 4 weeks after BoNT injection. Clinical severity was evaluated using TWSTRS. Functional MRI data were acquired on a 1.5 T scanner during 8 min rest. Seed-based functional connectivity analysis was performed using data extracted from atlas-defined cerebellar areas in both datasets. Clinical scores demonstrated satisfactory BoNT effect. After treatment, connectivity decreased between the vermis lobule VIIIa and the left dorsal mesial frontal cortex. Positive correlations between the connectivity differences and the clinical improvement were detected for the right lobule VI, right crus II, vermis VIIIb and the right lobule IX. Our data provide evidence for modulation of cerebello-cortical connectivity resulting from successful treatment by botulinum neurotoxin.

Highlights

  • In cervical dystonia, functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evidence indicates changes in several resting state networks, which revert in part following the botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT) therapy

  • In idiopathic cervical dystonia (CD), no consistent morphological tissue abnormalities have so far been observed in structural quantitative MRI or histopathological ­studies[3,25]

  • Functional MRI evidence demonstrates changes in multiple resting state networks (e.g.,12, which partly normalize with botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT) therapy, suggesting primarily functional disruption of the motor ­control[25,34]

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Summary

Introduction

Functional MRI (fMRI) evidence indicates changes in several resting state networks, which revert in part following the botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT) therapy. The only studies assessing the effect of BoNT-A on resting state connectivity either did not evaluate any cerebellar regions of i­nterest[6] or evaluated the cerebellum as a single region of interest (ROI)[12]. The remaining studies of resting-state connectivity in CD did not assess the effects of treatment and included patients with different times since their previous BoNT-A ­injection[35,40].

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