Parasympathetic Dysfunction Prevails in GBA1-Associated Parkinson's Disease

Mov Disord Clin Pract. 2024 Dec 20. doi: 10.1002/mdc3.14314. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: The role played by sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic branches in patients with Parkinson's disease carrying variants in the GBA1 gene (GBA-PD) is still elusive.

Objectives: To characterize cardiovascular autonomic function in GBA-PD and I-PD patients with early and mid-stage disease.

Methods: These assessments were performed: cardiovascular autonomic tests, analysis of heart rate and blood pressure variability, cardiac noradrenergic imaging. The frequency and severity of autonomic symptoms were comparatively assessed with the SCOPA-AUT questionnaire.

Results: Compared to the I-PD cohort, GBA-PD patients displayed an increased burden of autonomic symptoms. Autonomic tests revealed worse parasympathetic scores in GBA-PD while sympathetic indexes and the degree of cardiac sympathetic binding were comparable in the two groups. Heart rate variability indexes also revealed lower vagal modulation in the GBA-PD group.

Conclusions: The cardiovascular autonomic profile in GBA PD is characterized by a prominent cardiovagal dysfunction compared to I-PD.

Keywords: Parkinson's disease; dysautonomia; glucocerebrosidase; non‐motor symptoms.