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Cardiac responses to viewing facial emotion differentiate frontotemporal dementias

Marshall, CR; Hardy, CJD; Allen, M; Russell, LL; Clark, CN; Bond, RL; Dick, KM; Brotherhood, EV; Rohrer, JD; Kilner, JM; et al. Marshall, CR; Hardy, CJD; Allen, M; Russell, LL; Clark, CN; Bond, RL; Dick, KM; Brotherhood, EV; Rohrer, JD; Kilner, JM; Warren, JD (2018) Cardiac responses to viewing facial emotion differentiate frontotemporal dementias. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, 5 (6). pp. 687-696. ISSN 2328-9503 https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.563
SGUL Authors: Clark, Camilla Neegaard

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Abstract

Objective To establish proof‐of‐principle for the use of heart rate responses as objective measures of degraded emotional reactivity across the frontotemporal dementia spectrum, and to demonstrate specific relationships between cardiac autonomic responses and anatomical patterns of neurodegeneration. Methods Thirty‐two patients representing all major frontotemporal dementia syndromes and 19 healthy older controls performed an emotion recognition task, viewing dynamic, naturalistic videos of facial emotions while ECG was recorded. Cardiac reactivity was indexed as the increase in interbeat interval at the onset of facial emotions. Gray matter associations of emotional reactivity were assessed using voxel‐based morphometry of patients’ brain MR images. Results Relative to healthy controls, all patient groups had impaired emotion identification, whereas cardiac reactivity was attenuated in those groups with predominant fronto‐insular atrophy (behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and nonfluent primary progressive aphasia), but preserved in syndromes focused on the anterior temporal lobes (right temporal variant frontotemporal dementia and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia). Impaired cardiac reactivity correlated with gray matter atrophy in a fronto‐cingulo‐insular network that overlapped correlates of cognitive emotion processing. Interpretation Autonomic indices of emotional reactivity dissociate from emotion categorization ability, stratifying frontotemporal dementia syndromes and showing promise as novel biomarkers. Attenuated cardiac responses to the emotions of others suggest a core pathophysiological mechanism for emotional blunting and degraded interpersonal reactivity in these diseases.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2018 The Authors. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc on behalf of American Neurological Association. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: Academic Structure > Molecular and Clinical Sciences Research Institute (MCS)
Journal or Publication Title: Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology
ISSN: 2328-9503
Language: en
Dates:
DateEvent
5 June 2018Published
14 April 2018Published Online
19 March 2018Accepted
Publisher License: Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0
Projects:
Project IDFunderFunder ID
091673/Z/10/ZWellcome Trusthttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100004440
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/112251
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.563

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