4.0 Article

Altered visual entrainment in patients with Alzheimer's disease: magnetoencephalography evidence

期刊

BRAIN COMMUNICATIONS
卷 4, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcac198

关键词

magnetoencephalography; Alzheimer's; dementia; entrainment; vision

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-MH116782, R01-MH118013, P20-GM144641, RF1-MH117032, F31-AG055332, F32-NS119375, F30-AG076259]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Springer et al. report differences in neural processing of rhythmic visual stimuli in Alzheimer's disease patients, suggesting a compensatory effect. While previous research has indicated potential therapeutic effects of rhythmic visual entrainment in mouse models, little is known about the neural tracking of such stimuli in human patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Springer et al. report differences in neural processing of rhythmic visual stimuli in Alzheimer's disease patients relative to healthy controls. These results, along with correlations between visual responses and cognitive performance, suggest a compensatory effect, such that patients with Alzheimer's disease require stronger cortical responses to encode similar visual information. Recent research has indicated that rhythmic visual entrainment may be useful in clearing pathological protein deposits in the central nervous system of mouse models of Alzheimer's disease. However, visual entrainment studies in human patients with Alzheimer's disease are rare, and as such the degree to which these patients exhibit aberrations in the neural tracking of rhythmic visual stimuli is unknown. To fill this gap, we recorded magnetoencephalography during a 15 Hz visual entrainment paradigm in amyloid-positive patients on the Alzheimer's disease spectrum and compared their neural responses to a demographically matched group of biomarker-negative healthy controls. Magnetoencephalography data were imaged using a beamformer and virtual sensor data were extracted from the peak visual entrainment responses. Our results indicated that, relative to healthy controls, participants on the Alzheimer's disease spectrum exhibited significantly stronger 15 Hz entrainment in primary visual cortices relative to a pre-stimulus baseline period. However, the two groups exhibited comparable absolute levels of neural entrainment, and higher absolute levels of entertainment predicted greater Mini-mental Status Examination scores, such that those patients whose absolute entrainment amplitude was closer to the level seen in controls had better cognitive function. In addition, 15 Hz periodic activity, but not aperiodic activity, during the pre-stimulus baseline period was significantly decreased in patients on the Alzheimer's disease spectrum. This pattern of results indicates that patients on the Alzheimer's disease spectrum exhibited increased visual entrainment to rhythmic stimuli and that this increase is likely compensatory in nature. More broadly, these results show that visual entrainment is altered in patients with Alzheimer's disease and should be further examined in future studies, as changes in the capacity to entrain visual stimuli may prove useful as a marker of Alzheimer's disease progression.

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