Idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) is characterized by nocturnal violence, increased muscle tone during REM sleep and the lack of any other neurological disease. However, iRBD can precede parkinsonism and dementia by several years. The causes of the loss of muscle atonia during REM sleep in these patients are unclear. Using 3 T MRI and neuromelanin- sensitive sequences, the signal intensity was previously found to be reduce in the locus coeruleus/subcoeruleus area of patients with Parkinson's disease and RBD. Here, the investigators aimed at studying the integrity of the locus coeruleus/ subcoeruleus complex with neuromelanin-sensitive imaging in 21 patients with iRBD and compared the results with those from 21 age- and gender-matched healthy volunteers. All subjects will undergo a clinical examination, motor, cognitive, autonomous, psychological, olfactory and color vision tests, and rapid eye movement sleep characterization using video-polysomnography and 3 T magnetic resonance imaging.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
42
Clinical examination, motor, cognitive, autonomous, psychological, olfactory and color vision tests, and rapid eye movement sleep characterization using video-polysomnography and 3 T magnetic resonance imaging
Pitie Salpetriere hospital
Paris, France
Signal in the subcoeruleus/coeruleus complex
Brain imaging signal in the subcoeruleus/coeruleus complex in 3T multimodal MRI, using neuromelanin-sensitive sequence
Time frame: 24h
Substantia nigra quantity
size of the substantia nigra
Time frame: 24h
Quality of Sleep
Measures in videopolysomnography of efficiency of sleep
Time frame: 24h
Cognition
Cognition status (MoCA test)
Time frame: 24h
Olfactory function
Olfactory function (sniff test)
Time frame: 24h
Color vision
Color vision function
Time frame: 24h
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