To determine whether subjects with dystonia in the UK Biobank exhibit MRI-based cerebellar pathology.
Dystonia is a movement disorder characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle contractions causing abnormal movements and/or postures. Although classically considered a basal-ganglia disorder, neuroimaging studies of dystonia have revealed physiologic, structural, and functional changes in both the (1) pallido-thalamic and (2) cerebello-thalamic networks. Diffusion-weighted-MRI (DWI) analyses of both networks in dystonia have revealed differences in non-specific Diffusion-Tensor metrics such as Fractional Anisotropy. However newer DWI models, such as Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging (NODDI), assess more specific and biologically relevant white-matter properties.
After correcting for multiple-comparisons (40 volumetric and 35 diffusion-related) using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure (FDR = 0.05), intracellular-volume-fraction (ICVF) of the middle- and superior-cerebellar peduncles was significantly lower in subjects with dystonia, suggesting reduced axon density; volumetric analysis showed significantly reduced volumes of the motor cerebellum (lobules VI and VIII). There were no differences in basal ganglia, cortical, or whole-brain volumes.
These findings support the hypothesis that abnormalities of cerebellar networks contribute to the pathogenesis of dystonia.