4.6 Article

Neural basis of visuospatial tests in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia

Journal

FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.963751

Keywords

frontotemporal dementia; visuospatial; Alzheimer's disease; visual perception; positron-emission tomography

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (European Regional Development Fund A way to make Europe) [FI20/000145, INT20/00079]

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This study investigated the visuospatial task performance and neural mechanisms in patients with bvFTD and AD. The results showed that patients with AD performed the worst in visuospatial tasks in mild dementia, while patients with bvFTD showed higher correlations between attention and executive functioning and visuospatial performance. The visuospatial deficits in patients with bvFTD were associated with bilateral frontal regions.
BackgroundRecent models of visuospatial functioning suggest the existence of three main circuits emerging from the dorsal (where) route: parieto-prefrontal pathway, parieto-premotor, and parieto-medial temporal. Neural underpinnings of visuospatial task performance and the sparing of visuospatial functioning in bvFTD are unclear. We hypothesized different neural and cognitive mechanisms in visuospatial tasks performance in bvFTD and AD. MethodsTwo hundred and sixteen participants were enrolled for this study: 72 patients with bvFTD dementia and 144 patients with AD. Visual Object and Space Perception Battery Position Discrimination and Number Location (VOSP-PD and VOSP-NL) and Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure (ROCF) were administered to examine visuospatial functioning, together with a comprehensive neuropsychological battery. FDG-PET was acquired to evaluate brain metabolism. Voxel-based brain mapping analyses were conducted to evaluate the brain regions associated with visuospatial function in bvFTD and AD. ResultsPatients with AD performed worst in visuospatial tasks in mild dementia, but not at prodromal stage. Attention and executive functioning tests showed higher correlations in bvFTD than AD with ROCF, but not VOSP subtests. Visuospatial performance in patients with bvFTD was associated with bilateral frontal regions, including the superior and medial frontal gyri, supplementary motor area, insula and middle cingulate gyrus. ConclusionThese findings support the role of prefrontal and premotor regions in visuospatial processing through the connection with the posterior parietal cortex and other posterior cortical regions. Visuospatial deficits should be interpreted with caution in patients with bvFTD, and should not be regarded as hallmarks of posterior cortical dysfunction.

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