Altered brain mechanisms of emotion processing in pre-manifest Huntington's disease

被引:71
作者
Novak, Marianne J. U. [2 ]
Warren, Jason D. [3 ]
Henley, Susie M. D. [1 ]
Draganski, Bogdan [4 ]
Frackowiak, Richard S. [4 ]
Tabrizi, Sarah J. [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, Inst Neurol, Dept Neurodegenerat Dis, London WC1N 3BG, England
[2] UCL, Inst Neurol, Wellcome Trust Ctr Neuroimaging, London WC1N 3BG, England
[3] UCL, Inst Neurol, Dementia Res Ctr, London WC1N 3BG, England
[4] Univ Lausanne, CHUV, Dept Clin Neurosci, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
emotion; Huntington's disease; neurodegenerative disorders; cognitive impairment; functional MRI; IMPAIRED RECOGNITION; FACIAL EXPRESSIONS; DISGUST; FMRI; DYSFUNCTION; PERCEPTION; INTERFERENCE; PREMANIFEST; INFERENCE; FEELINGS;
D O I
10.1093/brain/aws024
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Huntington's disease is an inherited neurodegenerative disease that causes motor, cognitive and psychiatric impairment, including an early decline in ability to recognize emotional states in others. The pathophysiology underlying the earliest manifestations of the disease is not fully understood; the objective of our study was to clarify this. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate changes in brain mechanisms of emotion recognition in pre-manifest carriers of the abnormal Huntington's disease gene (subjects with pre-manifest Huntington's disease): 16 subjects with pre-manifest Huntington's disease and 14 control subjects underwent 1.5 tesla magnetic resonance scanning while viewing pictures of facial expressions from the Ekman and Friesen series. Disgust, anger and happiness were chosen as emotions of interest. Disgust is the emotion in which recognition deficits have most commonly been detected in Huntington's disease; anger is the emotion in which impaired recognition was detected in the largest behavioural study of emotion recognition in pre-manifest Huntington's disease to date; and happiness is a positive emotion to contrast with disgust and anger. Ekman facial expressions were also used to quantify emotion recognition accuracy outside the scanner and structural magnetic resonance imaging with voxel-based morphometry was used to assess the relationship between emotion recognition accuracy and regional grey matter volume. Emotion processing in pre-manifest Huntington's disease was associated with reduced neural activity for all three emotions in partially separable functional networks. Furthermore, the Huntington's disease-associated modulation of disgust and happiness processing was negatively correlated with genetic markers of pre-manifest disease progression in distributed, largely extrastriatal networks. The modulated disgust network included insulae, cingulate cortices, pre- and postcentral gyri, precunei, cunei, bilateral putamena, right pallidum, right thalamus, cerebellum, middle frontal, middle occipital, right superior and left inferior temporal gyri, and left superior parietal lobule. The modulated happiness network included postcentral gyri, left caudate, right cingulate cortex, right superior and inferior parietal lobules, and right superior frontal, middle temporal, middle occipital and precentral gyri. These effects were not driven merely by striatal dysfunction. We did not find equivalent associations between brain structure and emotion recognition, and the pre-manifest Huntington's disease cohort did not have a behavioural deficit in out-of-scanner emotion recognition relative to controls. In addition, we found increased neural activity in the pre-manifest subjects in response to all three emotions in frontal regions, predominantly in the middle frontal gyri. Overall, these findings suggest that pathophysiological effects of Huntington's disease may precede the development of overt clinical symptoms and detectable cerebral atrophy.
引用
收藏
页码:1165 / 1179
页数:15
相关论文
共 65 条
[1]  
Adolphs R, 2000, J NEUROSCI, V20, P2683
[2]   Neural systems for recognizing emotion [J].
Adolphs, R .
CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY, 2002, 12 (02) :169-177
[3]  
Adolphs Ralph, 2002, Behav Cogn Neurosci Rev, V1, P21, DOI 10.1177/1534582302001001003
[4]   Voxel-based morphometry - The methods [J].
Ashburner, J ;
Friston, KJ .
NEUROIMAGE, 2000, 11 (06) :805-821
[5]   Unified segmentation [J].
Ashburner, J ;
Friston, KJ .
NEUROIMAGE, 2005, 26 (03) :839-851
[6]   A fast diffeomorphic image registration algorithm [J].
Ashburner, John .
NEUROIMAGE, 2007, 38 (01) :95-113
[7]   Not on the face alone: perception of contextualized face expressions in Huntingtons disease [J].
Aviezer, Hillel ;
Bentin, Shlomo ;
Hassin, Ran R. ;
Meschino, Wendy S. ;
Kennedy, Jeanne ;
Grewal, Sonya ;
Esmail, Sherali ;
Cohen, Sharon ;
Moscovitch, Morris .
BRAIN, 2009, 132 :1633-1644
[8]   REDUCED BASAL GANGLIA VOLUME ASSOCIATED WITH THE GENE FOR HUNTINGTONS-DISEASE IN ASYMPTOMATIC AT-RISK PERSONS [J].
AYLWARD, EH ;
BRANDT, J ;
CODORI, AM ;
MANGUS, RS ;
BARTA, PE ;
HARRIS, GJ .
NEUROLOGY, 1994, 44 (05) :823-828
[9]   Suppressing Sensorimotor Activity Modulates the Discrimination of Auditory Emotions But Not Speaker Identity [J].
Banissy, Michael J. ;
Sauter, Disa Anna ;
Ward, Jamie ;
Warren, Jane E. ;
Walsh, Vincent ;
Scott, Sophie K. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 30 (41) :13552-13557
[10]  
Benton A., 1994, CONTRIBUTIONS NEUROP