Abstract

AbstractBackgroundInsomnia and thalamic involvement are hallmarks of fatal familial insomnia; however, it was occasionally reported that genetic E200K Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease (CJD) patients had also manifested thalamic‐insomnia phenotype. The study aimed to explore the clinical and neuroimage characteristics of genetic E200K CJD by comprehensive neuroimage analysis.MethodsSix genetic CJD patients carried Glu to Lys change at codon 200 (E200K) mutations on prion protein gene (PRNP), thirteen sporadic CJD (sCJD), and twenty‐two age‐ and sex‐matched normal controls were enrolled in the study. All participants completed hybrid positron emission tomography/ magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MRI) examinations. The high signal was visually inspected on diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) sequence. 18F‐fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18F‐FDG‐PET) and structural images were quantitively analyzed by statistically parameter mapping (SPM). Clinical and image characteristics are compared between genetic E200K CJD patients and sporadic CJD patients.ResultsThere was no group difference in age (49.0±7.1 versus 55.0±4.9 versus 52.7±7.3, p = 0.193) and gender (3/3 versus 4/9 versus 11/11, p = 0.513) between genetic E200K CJD, sCJD, and normal controls. Insomnia was the main complaint in the genetic E200K CJD patients’ group (4/2 versus 1/12, p = 0.007). Hyperintensity, hypometabolism but not predominant atrophy of the thalamus was found by visual inspection in genetic E200K CJD patients. A decreased trend was found on gray matter volume (uncorrected p<0.0001) and metabolism (FWE corrected) of the thalamus in genetic E200K patients.ConclusionThe clinical and image characteristics of genetic E200K CJD mimic fatal familial insomnia, manifested as a thalamic‐insomnia phenotype, indicating some specific underlying pathological changes might exist in E200K mutations. PET measurement is a sensitive approach to help identify the functional changes of the thalamus in prion disease.

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