4.7 Article

Pain and temperature processing in dementia: a clinical and neuroanatomical analysis

期刊

BRAIN
卷 138, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awv276

关键词

pain; temperature; sensory; frontotemporal dementia; Alzheimer's disease

资金

  1. Alzheimer's Research UK
  2. Brain Research Trust
  3. Wolfson Foundation
  4. Wellcome Trust
  5. UK Medical Research Council
  6. NIHR Queen Square Dementia Biomedical Research Unit
  7. AVID Radiopharamaceuticals
  8. National Brain Appeal Frontotemporal Dementia Research Fund
  9. MRC Research Training Fellowship
  10. Alzheimer Research UK PhD Fellowship
  11. Wellcome Trust Senior Clinical Fellowship [091673/Z/10/Z]
  12. MRC [MR/M008525/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  13. Alzheimers Research UK [ART-PhD2011-10] Funding Source: researchfish
  14. Medical Research Council [MR/M008525/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  15. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2012-18-010, NF-SI-0512-10033] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Symptoms suggesting altered processing of pain and temperature have been described in dementia diseases and may contribute importantly to clinical phenotypes, particularly in the frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum, but the basis for these symptoms has not been characterized in detail. Here we analysed pain and temperature symptoms using a semi-structured caregiver questionnaire recording altered behavioural responsiveness to pain or temperature for a cohort of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (n = 58, 25 female, aged 52-84 years, representing the major clinical syndromes and representative pathogenic mutations in the C9orf72 and MAPT genes) and a comparison cohort of patients with amnestic Alzheimer's disease (n = 20, eight female, aged 5374 years). Neuroanatomical associations were assessed using blinded visual rating and voxel-based morphometry of patients' brain magnetic resonance images. Certain syndromic signatures were identified: pain and temperature symptoms were particularly prevalent in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (71% of cases) and semantic dementia (65% of cases) and in association with C9orf72 mutations (6/6 cases), but also developed in Alzheimer's disease (45% of cases) and progressive non-fluent aphasia (25% of cases). While altered temperature responsiveness was more common than altered pain responsiveness across syndromes, blunted responsiveness to pain and temperature was particularly associated with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (40% of symptomatic cases) and heightened responsiveness with semantic dementia (73% of symptomatic cases) and Alzheimer's disease (78% of symptomatic cases). In the voxel-based morphometry analysis of the frontotemporal lobar degeneration cohort, pain and temperature symptoms were associated with grey matter loss in a right-lateralized network including insula (P<0.05 corrected for multiple voxel-wise comparisons within the prespecified anatomical region of interest) and anterior temporal cortex (P<0.001 uncorrected over whole brain) previously implicated in processing homeostatic signals. Pain and temperature symptoms accompanying C9orf72 mutations were specifically associated with posterior thalamic atrophy (P<0.05 corrected for multiple voxel-wise comparisons within the prespecified anatomical region of interest). Together the findings suggest candidate cognitive and neuroanatomical bases for these salient but under-appreciated phenotypic features of the dementias, with wider implications for the homeostatic pathophysiology and clinical management of neurodegenerative diseases.

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