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Prospective memory impairment in idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder

Authors :
Jiří Keller
Veronika Ibarburu
Zuzana Meckova
Jiří Nepožitek
Josef Vymazal
Evžen Růžička
Pavel Dusek
Tomas Nikolai
Jiří Trnka
Iva Příhodová
Pavla Peřinová
David Kemlink
Petr Dusek
Karel Sonka
Karel Kupka
Ondrej Bezdicek
Simona Dostálová
Source :
The Clinical neuropsychologist. 32(5)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to investigate if prospective memory (PM) is impaired in idiopathic rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (iRBD). RBD is a parasomnia characterized by dream enactment and by REM sleep without muscle atonia. iRBD is considered as the initial stage of neurodegeneration with pathological storage of alpha-synuclein.Sixty iRBD patients with polysomnography-confirmed RBD without parkinsonism and dementia and 30 demographically matched normal controls (NC) were enrolled in the present study. Clinical assessment included Movement Disorders Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), dopamine transporter single-photon emission computed tomography (DaT-SPECT) for imaging synapses of dopaminergic neurons in the striatum and a neuropsychological battery with embedded time-based and event-based PM measures.iRBD differed significantly from NC in event-based PM, a number of event-based failures to recall intention and total PM performance (all p .001) but did not differ in time-based PM and recognition. PM did not contribute to impairment of instrumental activities of daily living in iRBD. Despite being preserved in iRBD in comparison to NC, time-based PM correlated significantly with dopaminergic neuronal loss measured by DaT-SPECT.We show evidence for a differential pattern of PM impairment in iRBD with severe impairment of event-based and concurrent preservation of time-based PM. We theorize that event-based PM impairment in iRBD is caused by severe impairment of retention and recognition mechanisms in episodic memory whereas time-based PM seems to be affected by reduced striatal dopaminergic synapses.

Details

ISSN :
17444144
Volume :
32
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Clinical neuropsychologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5feabc998dd7399b41cca251384f291