[18F]FDOPA PET and clinical features in Parkinsonism due to manganism

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Abstract

Manganese exposure reportedly causes a clinically and pathophysiologically distinct syndrome from idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD). We describe the clinical features and results of positron emission tomography with 6-[18F]fluorodopa ([18F]FDOPA PET) of a patient with parkinsonism occurring in the setting of elevated blood manganese. The patient developed parkinsonism associated with elevated serum manganese from hepatic dysfunction. [18F]FDOPA PET demonstrated relatively symmetric and severely reduced [18F]FDOPA levels in the posterior putamen compared to controls. The globus pallidum interna had increased signal on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images. We conclude that elevated manganese exposure may be associated with reduced striatal [18F]FDOPA uptake, and MRI may reveal selective abnormality within the internal segment of the pallidum. This case suggests that the clinical and pathophysiological features of manganese-associated parkinsonism may overlap with that of PD. © Movement Disorder Society.

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Racette, B. A., Antenor, J. A., McGee-Minnich, L., Moerlein, S. M., Videen, T. O., Kotagal, V., & Perlmutter, J. S. (2005). [18F]FDOPA PET and clinical features in Parkinsonism due to manganism. Movement Disorders, 20(4), 492–496. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.20381

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