4.7 Article

Pathological laughter and crying: insights from lesion network-symptom-mapping

期刊

BRAIN
卷 144, 期 -, 页码 3264-3276

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awab224

关键词

diaschisis; pseudobulbar affect; resting-state functional connectivity

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SA 1723/5-1]
  2. University of Leipzig Medical Faculty [990101-113]
  3. James S. McDonnell Foundation [220020292]
  4. Merz Pharma GmbH & Co. KGaA (Frankfurt, Germany) [BGAAF-0136]
  5. Clinician Scientist Program of the University of Leipzig Medical Faculty
  6. IPSEN Pharma GmbH (Munich, Germany) [BGAAF-0135]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study of pathological laughter and crying provides insights into the neural basis of these behaviors, which are triggered by CNS disorders. Lesions causing PLC are linked to dysfunction in a cortico-limbic-subcortico-thalamo-ponto-cerebellar network, involving both emotional and volitional systems for controlling facial movements.
The study of pathological laughter and crying (PLC) allows insights into the neural basis of laughter and crying, two hallmarks of human nature. PLC is defined by brief, intense and frequent episodes of uncontrollable laughter or crying provoked by trivial stimuli. It occurs secondary to CNS disorders such as stroke, tumours or neurodege-nerative diseases. Based on case studies reporting various lesions locations, PLC has been conceptualized as dysfunction in a cortico-limbic-subcortico-thalamo-ponto-cerebellar network. To test whether the heterogeneous lesion locations are indeed linked in a common network, we applied 'lesion network-symptom-mapping' to 70 focal lesions identified in a systematic literature search for case reports of PLC. In lesion network-symptom-mapping normative connectome data (resting state functional MRI, n = 100) is used to identify the brain regions that are likely affected by diaschisis based on the lesion locations. With lesion network-symptom-mapping we were able to identify a common network specific for PLC when compared with a control co-hort (n = 270). This bilateral network is characterized by positive connectivity to the cingulate and temporomesial cortices, striatum, hypothalamus, mesencephalon and pons, and negative connectivity to the primary motor and sensory cortices. In the most influential pathophysiological model of PLC, a centre for the control and coordination of facial expressions, respiration and vocalization in the periaqueductal grey is assumed, which is controlled via two pathways: an emotional system that exerts excitatory control of the periaqueductal grey descending from the temporal and frontal lobes, basal ganglia and hypothalamus; and a volitional system descending from the lateral premotor cortices that can suppress laughter or crying. To test whether the positive and negative PLC subnetworks identified in our analyses can indeed be related to an emotional system and a volitional system, we identified lesions causing emotional (n = 15) or volitional facial paresis (n = 46) in a second literature search. Patients with emotional facial paresis show preserved volitional movements but cannot trigger emotional movements in the affected hemiface, while the reverse is true for volitional facial paresis. Importantly, these lesions map differentially onto the PLC subnetworks: the 'positive PLC subnetwork' is part of the emotional system and the 'negative PLC subnetwork' overlaps with the volitional system for the control of facial movements. Based on this network analysis we propose a two-hit model of PLC: a combination of direct lesion and indirect diaschisis effects cause PLC through the loss of inhibitory cortical control of a dysfunctional emotional system.

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