Socioemotional Dysfunction From Temporal Lobe Involvement in Frontotemporal Dementia: A Preliminary Report.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-11 DOI:10.1176/appi.neuropsych.20230175
Kelsey A Holiday, Alexander Sheppard, Youssef I Khattab, Diana Chavez, Rebecca J Melrose, Mario F Mendez
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Abstract

Objective: Socioemotional changes, rather than cognitive impairments, are the feature that defines behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). Investigators have attributed the socioemotional changes in bvFTD and other dementias to frontal lobe dysfunction; however, recent work implies a further contribution from right anterior temporal disease. The authors evaluated relationships between regional brain atrophy and socioemotional changes in both bvFTD and early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD).

Methods: This study explored the neuroanatomical correlations of performance on the Socioemotional Dysfunction Scale (SDS), an instrument previously shown to document socioemotional changes in bvFTD, among 13 patients with bvFTD not preselected for anterior temporal involvement and 16 age-matched patients with early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD). SDS scores were correlated with volumes of regions of interest assessed with tensor-based morphometric analysis of MRI images.

Results: As expected, the bvFTD group had significantly higher SDS scores overall and smaller frontal regions compared with the EOAD group, which in turn had smaller volumes in temporoparietal regions. SDS scores significantly correlated with lateral anterior temporal lobe (ATL) atrophy, and a regression analysis that controlled for diagnosis indicated that SDS scores predicted lateral ATL volume. Within the bvFTD group, higher SDS scores were associated with smaller lateral and right ATL regions, as well as a smaller orbitofrontal cortex. Within the EOAD group, higher SDS scores were associated with a smaller right parietal cortex.

Conclusions: This study confirms that, in addition to orbitofrontal disease, there is a prominent right and lateral ATL origin of socioemotional changes in bvFTD and further suggests that right parietal involvement contributes to socioemotional changes in EOAD.

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前额颞叶痴呆症颞叶受累引起的社会情感功能障碍:初步报告
目的:行为变异型额颞叶痴呆症(bvFTD)的特征是社会情感变化,而不是认知障碍。研究人员曾将行为变异性额颞叶痴呆症和其他痴呆症的社会情感变化归因于额叶功能障碍;然而,最近的研究表明,右前颞叶疾病也会造成社会情感变化。作者评估了bvFTD和早发性阿尔茨海默病(EOAD)的区域脑萎缩与社会情感变化之间的关系:本研究探讨了社会情感功能障碍量表(SDS)表现的神经解剖学相关性,该量表是一种以前曾被证明可记录bvFTD患者社会情感变化的工具,适用于13名未预选前颞部受累的bvFTD患者和16名年龄匹配的早发性阿尔茨海默病(EOAD)患者。SDS 评分与通过基于张量的核磁共振成像形态分析评估的感兴趣区的体积相关:不出所料,与 EOAD 组相比,bvFTD 组的 SDS 总分明显更高,额叶区域更小,而 EOAD 组的颞顶叶区域体积也更小。SDS评分与外侧前颞叶(ATL)萎缩明显相关,控制诊断的回归分析表明,SDS评分可预测外侧ATL的体积。在 bvFTD 组中,较高的 SDS 分数与较小的外侧和右侧 ATL 区域以及较小的眶额皮质有关。在 EOAD 组中,较高的 SDS 分数与较小的右顶叶皮质有关:这项研究证实,除了眶额叶疾病外,bvFTD 患者的社会情感变化还主要源于右侧和外侧 ATL,并进一步表明,右顶叶受累也会导致 EOAD 患者的社会情感变化。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.40%
发文量
67
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: As the official Journal of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the premier North American organization of clinicians, scientists, and educators specializing in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and the clinical neurosciences, the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (JNCN) aims to publish works that advance the science of brain-behavior relationships, the care of persons and families affected by neurodevelopmental, acquired neurological, and neurodegenerative conditions, and education and training in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry. JNCN publishes peer-reviewed articles on the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral manifestations of neurological conditions, the structural and functional neuroanatomy of idiopathic psychiatric disorders, and the clinical and educational applications and public health implications of scientific advances in these areas. The Journal features systematic reviews and meta-analyses, narrative reviews, original research articles, scholarly considerations of treatment and educational challenges in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, analyses and commentaries on advances and emerging trends in the field, international perspectives on neuropsychiatry, opinions and introspections, case reports that inform on the structural and functional bases of neuropsychiatric conditions, and classic pieces from the field’s rich history.
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