Abstract

Apathy is a neuropsychiatric condition characterized by reduced motivation, initiative, and interest in daily life activities, and it is commonly reported in several neurodegenerative disorders. The study aims to investigate large-scale brain networks involved in apathy syndrome in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and Parkinson’s disease (PD) compared to a group of healthy controls (HC). The study sample includes a total of 60 subjects: 20 apathetic FTD and PD patients, 20 non apathetic FTD and PD patients, and 20 HC matched for age. Two disease-specific apathy-evaluation scales were used to measure the presence of apathy in FTD and PD patients; in the same day, a 3T brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with structural and resting-state functional (fMRI) sequences was acquired. Differences in functional connectivity (FC) were assessed between apathetic and non-apathetic patients with and without primary clinical diagnosis revealed, using a whole-brain, seed-to-seed approach. A significant hypoconnectivity between apathetic patients (both FTD and PD) and HC was detected between left planum polare and both right pre- or post-central gyrus. Finally, to investigate whether such neural alterations were due to the underlying neurodegenerative pathology, we replicated the analysis by considering two independent patients’ samples (i.e., non-apathetic PD and FTD). In these groups, functional differences were no longer detected. These alterations may subtend the involvement of neural pathways implicated in a specific reduction of information/elaboration processing and motor outcome in apathetic patients.

Highlights

  • Apathy is a neuropsychiatric condition characterized by reduced motivation, initiative, and interest in daily life activities

  • Regarding functional seed-to-seed analysis, resting-state paradigm showed a significant difference between apathetic patients and healthy controls (HC) and a significant difference between apathetic patients and non-apathetic patients, highlighting a hypoconnectivity between the left planum polare as seed and right pre- and post-central gyrus (p = 0.002 and p = 0.004, respectively) considered as targets

  • functional connectivity (FC) was evaluated among apathetic patients and HC

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Apathy is a neuropsychiatric condition characterized by reduced motivation, initiative, and interest in daily life activities. Apathy is commonly reported in several neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) [2], mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and Parkinson’s disease (PD) [3]. Apathy is severely present in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) [4] and commonly belongs to behavioral abnormalities in behavioral variant of FTD (bvFTD). The great majority of available neuroimaging studies about apathy in FTD and PD consider structural and metabolic changes. Structural and metabolic changes in patients with neurodegenerative disorders and apathy mainly affect left inferior frontal gyrus (part of central executive network) activated by stimulus-driven cognitive and affective processing [5]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call