Abstract

ObjectiveThe clinical manifestation of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterized by motor neuron degeneration, whereas frontotemporal dementia (FTD) patients show alterations of behavior and cognition. Both share repeat expansions in C9orf72 as the most prevalent genetic cause. Before disease-defining symptoms onset, structural and functional changes at cortical level may emerge in C9orf72 carriers. Here, we characterized oculomotor parameters and their association to neuropsychological domains in apparently asymptomatic individuals with mutations in ALS/FTD genes.Patients and methodsForty-eight carriers of ALS genes, without any clinical symptoms underwent video-oculographic examination, including 22 subjects with C9orf72 mutation, 17 with SOD1, and 9 with other ALS associated gene mutations (n = 3 KIF5A; n = 3 FUS/FUS + TBK1; n = 1 NEK1; n = 1 SETX; n = 1 TDP43). A total of 17 subjects underwent a follow-up measurement. Data were compared to 54 age- and gender-matched healthy controls. Additionally, mutation carriers performed a neuropsychological assessment.ResultsIn comparison to controls, the presymptomatic subjects performed significantly worse in executive oculomotor tasks such as the ability to perform correct anti-saccades. A gene mutation subgroup analysis showed that dysfunctions in C9orf72 carriers were much more pronounced than in SOD1 carriers. The anti-saccade error rate of ALS mutation carriers was associated with cognitive deficits: this correlation was increased in subjects with C9orf72 mutation, whereas SOD1 carriers showed no associations.ConclusionIn C9orf72 carriers, executive eye movement dysfunctions, especially the increased anti-saccade error rate, were associated with cognitive impairment and unrelated to time. These oculomotor impairments are in support of developmental deficits in these mutations, especially in prefrontal areas.

Highlights

  • The underlying pathological process in neurodegenerative conditions likely begins some time before the emergence of clinical symptoms

  • Eye movement control was different between the gene mutation carriers (n = 48) compared to healthy controls (n = 54) and between the subgroups C9orf72 (n = 22) and SOD1 carriers (n = 17) compared to healthy controls, respectively (Table 2)

  • Gain of reactive primary saccades in horizontal and downwards directions revealed no statistical difference, the Visually guided reactive saccades (VGRS) gain in upward direction was significantly lower in comparison to controls (p < 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

The underlying pathological process in neurodegenerative conditions likely begins some time before the emergence of clinical symptoms. Signs may be decades long in many neurodegenerative disorders While ALS is primarily characterized by motor neuron degeneration, cognitive deficits are quite common [3,4,5], including changes in executive functions together with verbal fluency, language, social cognition, and memory. These deficits could be associated with white matter changes in frontal areas in ALS patients [5, 6]. Alterations in the executive function of verbal fluency associated with a loss of structural integrity

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