Abstract

Decreased cardiac uptake in 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy has been adopted as one of the most reliable diagnostic tests for Parkinson disease (PD) in Japan. To investigate the morphological basis for this finding, we performed a detailed neuropathological study of the cardiac sympathetic nervous system of a 71-year-old autopsy-proven PD patient, who presented with a marked decrease in cardiac uptake of MIBG, just 1 year prior to death. We carefully examined the intermediolateral column at several levels of the thoracic spinal cord, the sympathetic trunk and ganglia, and the nerve plexus of the anterior wall of the left ventricle and compared the findings with those of five age-matched controls. We found that the cardiac plexus was more heavily involved than the sympathetic ganglia in this patient with PD. Our study may provide further evidence that the markedly decreased cardiac uptake of MIBG observed in PD cases represents preferential involvement of the cardiac sympathetic nerve plexus in this disorder.

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