Literature DB >> 20230125

Emotion regulation deficits in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and Alzheimer's disease.

Madeleine S Goodkind1, Anett Gyurak, Megan McCarthy, Bruce L Miller, Robert W Levenson.   

Abstract

We examined instructed and spontaneous emotion regulation in patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD, N = 32), which presents with profound emotional and personality changes; patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD, N = 17), which presents with profound memory impairment; and neurologically normal controls (N = 25). Participants were exposed to an aversive acoustic startle stimulus (115 dB) under 3 different conditions: (a) unwarned without instructions to down-regulate, (b) warned without instructions to down-regulate, and (c) warned with instructions to down-regulate. In the last 2 conditions, the warning took the form of a 20-s countdown. In all conditions, visible aspects of the startle response were assessed by measuring overall somatic activity and coding emotional facial expressions. FTLD patients, AD patients, and control participants showed similar patterns of down-regulation in somatic activity across the 3 startle trials. However, differences between the 3 groups emerged in the amount of emotional facial behavior expressed in the startle trials. There were no group differences in response in the unwarned condition, indicating that the startle response was intact in the patients. In the warned with instructions condition, both FTLD and AD patients were moderately impaired in down-regulatory ability compared with controls. In the warned without instructions condition, AD patients and normal controls spontaneously down-regulated their emotional responses, but FTLD patients did not. These findings illuminate specific problems that these patients have in the emotional realm.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20230125      PMCID: PMC2841311          DOI: 10.1037/a0018519

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Aging        ISSN: 0882-7974


  42 in total

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  28 in total

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Review 2.  Personality and social cognition in neurodegenerative disease.

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4.  Effects of aging on experimentally instructed detached reappraisal, positive reappraisal, and emotional behavior suppression.

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5.  Stress and Illness: A Role for Specific Emotions.

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Review 6.  The behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia: linking neuropathology to social cognition.

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7.  'Just can't hide it': a behavioral and lesion study on emotional response modulation after right prefrontal damage.

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8.  Emotion recognition in objects in patients with neurological disease.

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9.  Greater Experience of Negative Non-Target Emotions by Patients with Neurodegenerative Diseases Is Related to Lower Emotional Well-Being in Caregivers.

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Journal:  Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord       Date:  2017-12-08       Impact factor: 2.959

Review 10.  Language, executive function and social cognition in the diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia syndromes.

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Journal:  Int Rev Psychiatry       Date:  2013-04
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