Exploring biomechanical differences between brain-first and body-first Parkinson’s disease subtypes using shear wave elastography: a pilot cross-sectional study
Shuangshuang Dong, Bo Shen, Yihong Song, Haiying Zhang, Yang Zhao, Yunyang Chen, Xu Jiang, Jun Zhu, Yang Pan, Ben Liu, Li Zhang

TL;DR
This study explores how ultrasound can detect muscle stiffness differences in two Parkinson’s disease subtypes, suggesting it could help in clinical diagnosis.
Contribution
This is the first study to show biomechanical differences between brain-first and body-first Parkinson’s subtypes using shear wave elastography.
Findings
PD patients had significantly higher muscle stiffness than healthy controls.
Body-first PD subtype showed greater muscle stiffness than brain-first subtype.
SWE parameters correlated with clinical scores and could distinguish PD from controls with high accuracy.
Abstract
This exploratory study aimed to investigate whether ultrasound shear wave elastography (SWE) could quantify rigidity in Parkinson’s disease (PD) and assess potential biomechanical differences between the brain-first and body-first subtypes. Shear wave elastography was used to measure the Young’s modulus (YM) and shear wave velocity (SWV) of the biceps brachii in 70 healthy controls (HCs) and 102 patients with PD (40 classified as body-first, 62 classified as brain-first based on RBDSQ criteria). Group comparisons were conducted using t-tests or ANOVA, correlations were assessed via Pearson or Spearman tests, and diagnostic performance was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Young’s modulus and SWV values were significantly higher in PD patients than in HCs (all p < 0.001). The body-first group exhibited significantly greater YM and SWV than the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurological disorders and treatments · Ultrasound Imaging and Elastography · Voice and Speech Disorders
