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Edinburgh Research Archive >
Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, School of >
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Psychology PhD thesis collection >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6388
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Van Der Hulst2012.pdf | one year restriction | 16.15 MB | Adobe PDF | | Van Der Hulst2012.docx | one year restriction | 26.45 MB | Microsoft Word | |
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| Title: | Heterogeneity of cognitive impairment in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis |
| Authors: | Van Der Hulst, Egberdina Jozefa |
| Supervisor(s): | Abrahams, Sharon Bak, Thomas |
| Issue Date: | 27-Jun-2012 |
| Publisher: | The University of Edinburgh |
| Abstract: | This PhD thesis examines the relationship between Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)
and Frontotemporal dementia (FTD). ALS is a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative
movement disorder characterized by muscle weakness, spasticity and abnormal reflexes. In a
very small subset of patients (5-15%), ALS is associated with FTD. Furthermore, a larger
subset of patients who do not suffer from overt dementia, develop subtle deficits in cognition
and behaviour (up to 50%). The changes have mostly been observed in the domains of
executive functions, language and behavioural functioning. These observations have led
some researchers to propose a continuum of dysfunction between ALS and FTD, ranging
from an absence of neuropsychological abnormalities to mild, subclinical changes to a
profile consistent with a full-blown FTD-syndrome in ALS.
FTD consists of three subsyndromes; the first ‘executive-behavioural’ type, frontal variant
FTD (fvFTD), is predominantly characterized by behaviour abnormalities, difficulties with
using strategies and social judgement. In contrast, the other two types mainly involve
problems with ‘language’, including a central degradation of knowledge for words, objects,
people (semantic dementia; SD) as well as complications with speaking, spelling and the
sounds of language (progressive non-fluent aphasia; PNFA).
The current study aims to explore whether the cognitive-behavioural deficits found in nondemented
ALS-patients can be classified as subclinical forms of the first two FTDsyndromes,
i.e. fvFTD and SD. In addition, the study further examined whether executive
and language impairments co-exist or rather occur independently. To answer the research
questions, a battery of neuropsychological tests was employed, adapted to patients’ speech
and motor disabilities, as well as behavioural questionnaires.
The data revealed there was evidence of both executive and language involvement
characteristic of FTD, albeit to a subtle extent. ALS-patients showed deficits on a test of
Theory of Mind (ToM). On this test, participants were asked to judge the thoughts and
feelings of another, using the direction of eye gaze, a cue considered to be important for
social interaction. Results indicated that ALS patients had difficulties with affective ToM,
i.e. recognizing feelings of others, and this effect was not driven by perceptual or attentional
difficulties. In addition, patients exhibited a subtle deficit with empathy as well as a range of
behavioural abnormalities. Furthermore, ALS-patients showed abnormal performance on a
complex multi-modal semantic association task which involved assigning the correct picture
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to the sound of an object. This central deficit emerged in the presence of normal audio-visual
information processing and episodic memory functions. Moreover, a category-specific
deficit for man-made objects was detected in patients. Individual case-analyses showed that
various subsets of patients were impaired on the language and executive tasks. These
analyses also showed that executive and language problems can occur independently as well
as simultaneously in patients with ALS. In addition, analysis of individual cases revealed
that some patients’ performance on the decision making tasks was similar to that found in
patients with either orbitofrontal or dorsolateral dysfunction, while there was little if any
evidence of a pattern of impairment similar to that seen with anterior cingulate dysfunction.
The observed difficulties with social cognition and semantic processing indicate that
executive and language problems, characteristic of the two FTD syndromes, can be detected
in patients with classical ALS. |
| Keywords: | amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cognition neuropsychology |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6388 |
| Appears in Collections: | Psychology PhD thesis collection
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