학술논문

Neuropsychiatric symptoms and imbalance of atrophy in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia
Document Type
article
Source
Human Brain Mapping. 44(15)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Psychology
Neurosciences
Rare Diseases
Behavioral and Social Science
Brain Disorders
Dementia
Mental Health
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Neurodegenerative
Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)
Clinical Research
Neurological
Humans
Frontotemporal Dementia
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Apathy
Behavioral Symptoms
Hallucinations
Atrophy
Neuropsychological Tests
asymmetry
atrophy
bvFTD
dementia
Cognitive Sciences
Experimental Psychology
Biological psychology
Cognitive and computational psychology
Language
Abstract
Behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia is characterized by heterogeneous frontal, insular, and anterior temporal atrophy patterns that vary along left-right and dorso-ventral axes. Little is known about how these structural imbalances impact clinical symptomatology. The goal of this study was to assess the frequency of frontotemporal asymmetry (right- or left-lateralization) and dorsality (ventral or dorsal predominance of atrophy) and to investigate their clinical correlates. Neuropsychiatric symptoms and structural images were analyzed for 250 patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. Frontotemporal atrophy was most often symmetric while left-lateralized (9%) and right-lateralized (17%) atrophy were present in a minority of patients. Atrophy was more often ventral (32%) than dorsal (3%) predominant. Patients with right-lateralized atrophy were characterized by higher severity of abnormal eating behavior and hallucinations compared to those with left-lateralized atrophy. Subsequent analyses clarified that eating behavior was associated with right atrophy to a greater extent than a lack of left atrophy, and hallucinations were driven mainly by right atrophy. Dorsality analyses showed that anxiety, euphoria, and disinhibition correlated with ventral-predominant atrophy. Agitation, irritability, and depression showed greater severity with a lack of regional atrophy, including in dorsal regions. Aberrant motor behavior and apathy were not explained by asymmetry or dorsality. This study provides additional insight into how anatomical heterogeneity influences the clinical presentation of patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. Behavioral symptoms can be associated not only with the presence or absence of focal atrophy, but also with right/left or dorsal/ventral imbalance of gray matter volume.