4.7 Article

Social cognition in cervical dystonia: phenotype and relationship to anxiety and depression

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 98-107

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ene.14508

Keywords

cervical dystonia; social cognition; adult onset dystonia; depression; psychiatric disorders; neurological disorders; anxiety

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This study found that most CD patients perform normally on social perception and behavior tests, but there are impairments in belief reasoning (theory of mind) and empathy. Better performance in affect naming is associated with anxiety, depression and social phobia severity, while worse performance in empathy is associated with depression severity. Patients with CD had more difficulties in fearful face identification. social perception abilities in CD patients with more severe anxiety and depression suggest efficient modulation and self-adaptation of social cognitive skills.
Background and purpose Anxiety and depression are common disabling comorbidities in cervical dystonia (CD) and may predispose to social withdrawal and social cognitive impairments. The relationship between social cognition and depressive/anxiety symptoms in CD is under-investigated. Methods Forty-six CD patients (40 women; mean age +/- SD, 55.57 +/- 10.84 years) were administered the following social cognition battery: Affect Naming, Prosody Face and Pair Matching subtests from the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale IV and Wechsler Memory Scale IV (social perception), reality-known and reality-unknown false belief reasoning tasks (theory of mind), Empathy Quotient and Social Norms Questionnaire 22 (social behaviour), alongside the Benton Facial Recognition Task (non-emotional facial discrimination). Alongside CD severity, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale measured depressive/anxiety comorbid diagnostic status and severity, and the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale assessed social phobia. Social cognition tasks were standardized using published normative data and a cut-off ofz < -1.5 for impairment. Results More than 90% of our CD patients performed normally on social perception and social behaviour tests. Performance on impaired belief reasoning (theory of mind) was impaired in 10 of 46 (21.74%); five of 46 (10.87%) were impaired on the Empathy Quotient. Better performance on the Affect Naming task was associated with comorbid anxiety (eta(2) = 0.09, medium-to-large effect size) and greater anxiety, depression and social phobia severity. Worse performance on the Empathy Quotient was associated with comorbid depression (eta(2) = 0.11, medium-to-large effect size) and greater depression severity. CD patients had significantly more difficulties with fearful face identification (P < 0.001). Conclusions Greater social perception abilities in CD patients with more severe anxiety and depression suggest efficient modulation and self-adaptation of social cognitive skills.

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