4.5 Article

Unawareness of Apathy in Parkinson's Disease: The Role of Executive Dysfunction on Symptom Recognition

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci13060964

Keywords

anosognosia; awareness; apathy; Parkinson's Disease; non-motor symptoms; quality of life

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Altered self-awareness or anosognosia may affect everyday life and independent functioning of PD patients. The present study aimed to explore the awareness of apathy in PD patients through comparing self-reported evaluations with caregivers' ratings. The study found that there was fair agreement between patients' self-reports and caregivers' ratings on apathy scores. Patients reported less severe apathetic symptoms compared to their caregivers' reports, especially those related to executive and auto-activation processing. Executive functioning mediated the relationship between disease stage and awareness of apathy. Awareness of executive apathy impacted patients' self-reported quality of life. Anosognosia for apathy in PD patients may affect their quality of life perception and delays diagnosis and treatment.
Altered self-awareness or anosognosia may impact patients' everyday life by interfering with their safe and independent functioning. Symptom awareness has been linked to executive dysfunctions caused by damage to frontal regions. Apathy is a frequent neuropsychiatric manifestation of Parkinson's disease (PD) and is considered a consequence of altered functioning of cortico-subcortical circuitries connecting the prefrontal cortex (PFC) with the basal ganglia. Thus, apathetic PD patients may be not be fully aware of their condition due to shared neuropathophysiological mechanisms. The present study aimed to explore the awareness of apathy in PD patients by comparing the self-reported evaluations with their caregivers' ratings. Moreover, we explored the clinical predictors of possible discrepancies and their consequences on patients' self-reported evaluation of quality of life (QoL). We found a fair agreement between patients' self-reports and caregivers' ratings on apathy scores, with patients reporting less severe apathetic symptoms, especially those related to executive and auto-activation processing, compared to their caregivers' reports. Executive functioning was found to mediate the relationship between disease stage and awareness of the apathetic state. Awareness of executive apathy impacted patients' self-reported QoL. Therefore, PD patients might be unaware of their apathetic symptoms, especially those with worse executive functioning, which plays a key role in metacognitive processes such as self-monitoring and error detection. Anosognosia for apathy in PD patients may affect their QoL perception and leads to misleading self-report evaluations that delay diagnosis and treatment.

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