Abstract
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterised by deterioration in motor, oculomotor and cognitive function. A key clinical feature of PSP is the progressive paralysis of eye movements, most notably for vertical saccades. These oculomotor signs can be subtle, however, and PSP is often misdiagnosed as Parkinson’s disease (PD), in its early stages. Although some of the clinical features of PD and PSP overlap, they are distinct disorders with differing underlying pathological processes, responses to treatment and prognoses. One key difference lies in the effects the diseases have on cognition. The oculomotor system is tightly linked to cognitive processes such as spatial attention and spatial short-term memory (sSTM), and previous studies have suggested that PSP and PD experience different deficits in these domains. We therefore hypothesised that people with PSP (N = 15) would experience problems with attention (assessed with feature and conjunction visual search tasks) and sSTM (assessed with the Corsi blocks task) compared to people with PD (N = 16) and Age Matched Controls (N = 15). As predicted, feature and conjunction search were sgnificantly slower in the PSP group compared to the other groups, and this deficit was significantly worse for feature compared to conjunction search. The PD group did not differ from AMC on feature search but were significantly impaired on the conjunction search. The PSP group also had a pronounced vertical sSTM impairment that was not present in PD or AMC groups. It is argued that PSP is associated with specific impairment of visuospatial cognition which is caused by degeneration of the oculomotor structures that support exogenous spatial attention, consistent with oculomotor theories of spatial attention and memory.
Highlights
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) is a rare (Nath et al, 2001) and devastating neurodegenerative disease
It was predicted that people with PSP would show impaired visual search and spatial short-term memory compared to Parkinson’s disease (PD) and age matched controls, that this impairment will be more severe for feature search than conjunction search, and that PSP patient’s deficits of spatial STM will be more severe when stimuli appear along the vertical axis compared to horizontal axis
This study examined visual spatial attention and spatial STM in PSP and PD
Summary
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) is a rare (Nath et al, 2001) and devastating neurodegenerative disease. We address these issues by presenting previously unreported data from a sample of people with PD and PSP alongside a re-analysis and extension of data reported by (Smith & Archibald, 2019, 2020) which allows a direct comparison of PSP, PD and age matched controls. It was predicted that people with PSP would show impaired visual search and spatial short-term memory compared to PD and age matched controls, that this impairment will be more severe for feature search than conjunction search, and that PSP patient’s deficits of spatial STM will be more severe when stimuli appear along the vertical axis compared to horizontal axis
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