| Literature DB >> 25556811 |
Lisa Cipolotti1, Colm Healy2, Edgar Chan2, Fay Bolsover2, Francesca Lecce3, Mark White4, Barbara Spanò5, Tim Shallice6, Marco Bozzali5.
Abstract
Neuropsychological group study methodology is considered one of the primary methods to further understanding of the organisation of frontal 'executive' functions. Typically, patients with frontal lesions caused by stroke or tumours have been grouped together to obtain sufficient power. However, it has been debated whether it is methodologically appropriate to group together patients with neurological lesions of different aetiologies. Despite this debate, very few studies have directly compared the performance of patients with different neurological aetiologies on neuropsychological measures. The few that did included patients with both anterior and posterior lesions. We present the first comprehensive retrospective comparison of the impact of lesions of different aetiologies on neuropsychological performance in a large number of patients whose lesion solely affects the frontal cortex. We investigated patients who had a cerebrovascular accident (CVA), high (HGT) or low grade (LGT) tumour, or meningioma, all at the post-operative stage. The same frontal 'executive' (Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices, Stroop Colour-Word Test, Letter Fluency-S; Trail Making Test Part B) and nominal (Graded Naming Test) tasks were compared. Patients' performance was compared across aetiologies controlling for age and NART IQ scores. Assessments of focal frontal lesion location, lesion volume, global brain atrophy and non-specific white matter (WM) changes were undertaken and compared across the four aetiology. We found no significant difference in performance between the four aetiology subgroups on the 'frontal' executive and nominal tasks. However, we found strong effects of premorbid IQ on all cognitive tasks and robust effects of age only on the frontal tasks. We also compared specific aetiology subgroups directly, as previously reported in the literature. Overall we found no significant differences in the performance of CVA and tumour patients, or LGT and HGT patients or LGT, HGT and meningioma's on our four frontal tests. No difference was found with respect to the location of frontal lesions, lesion volume, global brain atrophy and non-specific WM changes between the subgroups. Our results suggest that the grouping of frontal patients caused by different aetiologies is a pragmatic, justified methodological approach that can help to further understanding of the organisation of frontal executive functions.Entities:
Keywords: Aetiology; Cognitive performance; Executive functions; Frontal lesions; Stroke; Tumour
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25556811 PMCID: PMC4410793 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2014.12.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychologia ISSN: 0028-3932 Impact factor: 3.139
Demographic results.
| 4/25 | 16/13 | 46.59 (17.71) | 107.15 (9.99) | 14.07 (3.46) | |
| 3/21 | 14/10 | 37.78 (7.08) | 112.30 (9.17) | 14.25 (2.92) | |
| 2/18 | 13/7 | 44.95 (14.51) | 104.16 (14.31) | 14.3 (2.7) | |
| 4/23 | 11/16 | 58.19 (10.70) | 108.48 (11.95) | 13.78 (3.21) |
CVA=stroke, LGT=low grade tumour, HGT=high grade tumour, L=left, R=right, M=male, F=female, N=number, SD=standard deviation.
Fig. 1Percentage of patients with damage to the different frontal areas in each aetiology subgroup. The number of patients in each aetiology subgroup for whom we analysed frontal lesion location. Shading illustrates the percentage of patients with damage to lateral (right and left), medial and orbito-frontal regions for each aetiology subgroup. Abbreviations: CVA=stroke; LGT=low grade tumour; HGT=high grade tumour.
Mean and standard deviation of the aetiology subgroups on the severity of white matter change.
| .65 (.78) | .17 (.39) | |
| .32 (.58) | .11 (.32) | |
| .75 (.58) | .13 (.34) | |
| 1.23 (.87) | .68 (.89) | |
WM=white matter; PVH=periventricular hyper intensity scale; DWMH=deep white matter hyper intense/hypo dense signal scale; CVA=stroke; LGT=low grade tumour; HGT=high grade tumour.
Neuropsychological results: left and right frontal patients.
| 107.48 (13.58) | 108.74 (9.68) | |
| 7.94 (2.60) | 8.27 (2.72) | |
| 77.81 (26.91) | 95.74 (22.92) | |
| 9.78 (5.99) | 13.55 (4.60) | |
| 96.21 (38.14) | 91.61 (72.29) | |
| 18.72 (4.68) | 21.50 (4.48) |
LF=left frontal, RF=right frontal, No=number, NART=National Adult Reading Test, RAPM=Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices, GNT=Graded Naming Test, N=number of participants, s=seconds and SD=standard deviation presented in parentheses.
Fig. 2Performance of on the four frontal tasks for each of the four different aetiologies. Mean scores of the four aetiology subgroups on the four frontal tests not accounting for age and NART IQ: (a) Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices, (b) Stroop Colour Word Task, (c) Letter Fluency ’S’, (d) Trail Making Test Part B. Error Bars represent ±1 standard error.
Regression analyses for each neuropsychological test with age and NART IQ as predictor variables.
| .265 | <.001 | −.067 (.018) | <.001 | .072 (.022) | .002 | |
| .488 | <.001 | .126 (.018) | <.001 | −.063 (.023) | .008 | |
| .242 | <.001 | −.149 (.039) | <.001 | .191 (.052) | <.001 | |
| .390 | <.001 | .009 (.001) | <.001 | −.004 (.002) | .044 | |
| .489 | <.001 | −.003 (.004) | .427 | −.047 (.005) | <.001 | |
NART=National Adult Reading Test; RAPM=Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices; GNT=Graded Naming Test; ±1 standard error are presented in parentheses; R2=variance accounted for when age and NART are both used as predictors.