| Literature DB >> 25852500 |
Alberto Costa1, Carlo Caltagirone2.
Abstract
Approach and avoidance are two basic behavioral aptitudes of humans whose correct balance is critical for successful adaptation to the environment. As the expression of approach and avoidance tendencies may differ significantly between healthy individuals, different psychobiological factors have been posited to account for such variability. In this regard, two main issues are still open that refers to (i) the role played by dopamine neurotransmission; and (ii) the possible influence of cognitive characteristics, particularly executive functioning. The aim of the present paper was to highlight the contribution of research on Parkinson's disease (PD) to our understanding of the above issues. In particular, we here reviewed PD literature to clarify whether neurobiological and neuropsychological modifications due to PD are associated to changes in approach-avoidance related personality features. Available data indicate that PD patients may show and approach-avoidance imbalance as documented by lower novelty-seeking and higher harm-avoidance behaviors, possibly suggesting a relationship with neurobiological and neurocognitive PD-related changes. However, the literature that directly investigated this issue is still sparse and much more work is needed to better clarify it.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; approach-avoidance; cognitive functioning; dopamine systems; executive abilities; motivation disorders; personality
Year: 2015 PMID: 25852500 PMCID: PMC4371695 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2015.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
The table summarizes the results of main studies investigating approach-avoidance related functioning in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD).
| Studies | Study design | Sample size (case/controls) | Personality measures | Results referring to the PD group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Menza et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 51 PD; 31 controls with rheumatologic diseases | TPQ | Reduced Novelty seeking |
| Menza et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 9 PD | TPQ | Significant correlation between 6-[18F]fluorodopa uptake in the caudate nucleus and novelty seeking |
| Jacobs et al. ( | Cross-sectional; Case-control | 122 PD; 122 HCs | TPQ | Increased harm avoidance |
| Kaasinen et al. ( | Cross-sectional; Case-control | 61 PD (47 underwent PET examination); 45 healthy subjects | TCI; KSP | Reduced novelty seeking; increased harm avoidance; significant association between increased harm avoidance and 6-[18F]fluorodopa uptake in the caudate nucleus |
| Tomer and Aharon-Peretz ( | Cross-sectional; Case-control | 40 PD; 17 HCs | TPQ | Reduced novelty seeking; increased harm avoidance |
| Kaasinen et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 28 PD | TCI | Negative correlation between novelty seeking score and insular cortex D2 receptors availability |
| McNamara et al. ( | Cross-sectional; Case-control | 44 PD; 17 controls with chronic disease | TCI | Increased harm avoidance; Inverse correlation between verbal fluency and harm avoidance rates. |
| Bódi et al. ( | Longitudinal; Case-control | 48 PD; 20 HCs | TCI | Reduced novelty seeking; novelty seeking improvement after dopamine treatment |
| Volpato et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 25 PD | BFAC | Significant association between alternating verbal fluency and openness to experience factor |
| Arabia et al. ( | Longitudinal | 6,822 persons without PD at baseline; 156 developed PD at follow-up | MMPI | Significant association between anxiety symptoms and the risk of PD |
| Koerts et al. ( | Cross-sectional; Case-control | 43 PD; 25 HCs | TCI | Higher harm avoidance; Cognitive flexibility predicts reward dependence |
| Damholdt et al. ( | Cross-sectional | 409 PD | Neo-FFI | Reduced extraversion rates associated with depression |
HCs: Healthy control subjects; PET: Positron emission tomography; TPQ: Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (Cloninger, .