1. A neuropsychological and behavioral study of PLS
- Author
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de Vries, Bálint S., Spreij, Lauriane A., Rustemeijer, Laura M.M., Bakker, Leonhard A., Veldink, Jan H., van den Berg, Leonard H., Nijboer, Tanja C.W., van Es, Michael, Leerstoel Postma, Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF), Helmholtz Institute, Afd Psychologische functieleer, Leerstoel Postma, Experimental Psychology (onderzoeksprogramma PF), Helmholtz Institute, and Afd Psychologische functieleer
- Subjects
Male ,cognition ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Theory of Mind ,Clinical Neurology ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social cognition ,Primary lateral sclerosis ,Theory of mind ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Motor Neuron Disease ,Social Behavior ,neuropsychological evaluation ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,FTD ,Middle Aged ,Executive functions ,medicine.disease ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
Background: Primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) is a rare motor neuron disease characterized by progressive degeneration of upper motor neurons, resulting in spasticity and disability. There is, however, mounting evidence that the disease is not limited to upper motor neurons alone and that cognitive and behavioral changes within the spectrum of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are part of the clinical phenotype. Objectives: To provide an in-depth classification of the cognitive and behavioral profiles of PLS by using the golden standard, a full neuropsychological evaluation, as well as a comprehensive behavioral assessment in a cohort of 30 cases. Results: Only 7 out of 30 PLS patients scored within normal range on all of the tests within our battery. The neuropsychological profile of PLS consists of deficits in social cognition (affective theory of mind (ToM) in particular), fluency, executive functions and memory. Using the revised Strong criteria, we could classify 57% of patients within the FTD spectrum (of which 17% had behavioral variant FTD). An additional 20% of patients had deficits which were not characteristic of FTD. Conclusions: This study confirms that PLS is not a restricted phenotype (only affecting upper motor neurons) and that behavioral and cognitive changes are common. Therefore, clinicians treating PLS patients should routinely assess cognition and behavior as part of routine care as cognitive and behavioral changes impact management, decision-making and care-giver burden. This assessment should be sensitive to the neuropsychological profile of PLS (social cognition (affective ToM in particular), fluency, executive functions and memory) and behavioral changes.
- Published
- 2019