4.6 Article

Can a failure in the error-monitoring system explain unawareness of memory deficits in Alzheimer's disease?

Journal

CORTEX
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages 428-440

Publisher

ELSEVIER MASSON, CORP OFF
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2023.05.014

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; Memory deficits; Anosognosia; Error-monitoring system; Neural mechanism

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Unawareness of memory deficits is common in early-stage Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, possibly due to synaptic failure in the error-monitoring system. A study found that AD patients showed reduced error awareness and overestimated their cognitive abilities at the time of diagnosis, suggesting a critical role of synaptic dysfunction in the error-monitoring system in the unawareness of deficits in AD.
Unawareness of memory deficits is an early manifestation in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), which often delays diagnosis. This intriguing behavior constitutes a form of anosognosia, whose neural mechanisms remain largely unknown. We hypothesized that anosognosia may depend on a critical synaptic failure in the error-monitoring system, which would prevent AD patients from being aware of their own memory impairment. To investigate, we measured event-related potentials (ERPs) evoked by erroneous responses during a word memory recognition task in two groups of amyloid positive individuals with only subjective memory complaints at study entry: those who progressed to AD within the five-year study period (PROG group), and those who remained cognitively normal (CTRL group). A significant reduction in the amplitude of the positivity error (Pe), an ERP related to error awareness, was observed in the PROG group at the time of AD diagnosis (vs study entry) in intra-group analysis, as well as when compared with the CTRL group in inter-group analysis, based on the last EEG acquisition for all subjects. Importantly, at the time of AD diagnosis, the PROG group exhibited clinical signs of anosognosia, over-estimating their cognitive abilities, as evidenced by the discrepancy scores obtained from caregiver/informant vs participant reports on the cognitive subscale of the Healthy Aging Brain Care Monitor. To our knowledge, this is the first study to reveal the emergence of a failure in the error-monitoring system during a word memory recognition task at the early stages of AD. This finding, along with the decline of awareness for cognitive impairment observed in the PROG group, strongly suggests that a synaptic dysfunction in the error-monitoring system may be the critical neural mechanism at the origin of unawareness of deficits in AD. (c) 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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