| Literature DB >> 26869362 |
Pierre Maurage1, Magali Lahaye2, Delphine Grynberg3, Anne Jeanjean4, Lamia Guettat5, Christine Verellen-Dumoulin6, Stéphane Halkin7, Alexandre Heeren8, Joël Billieux2, Eric Constant9.
Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is centrally characterized by motor, neurocognitive and psychiatric symptoms, but impaired emotional decoding abilities have also been reported. However, more complex affective abilities are still to be explored, and particularly empathy, which is essential for social relations and is impaired in various psychiatric conditions. This study evaluates empathic abilities and social skills in pre-clinical and clinical HD, and explores the distinction between two empathy sub-components (emotional-cognitive). Thirty-six HD patients (17 pre-clinical) and 36 matched controls filled in the Empathy Quotient Scale, while controlling for psychopathological comorbidities. At the clinical stage of HD, no global empathy impairment was observed but rather a specific deficit for the cognitive sub-component, while emotional empathy was preserved. A deficit was also observed for social skills. Pre-clinical HD was not associated with any empathy deficit. Emotional deficits in clinical HD are thus not limited to basic emotion decoding but extend towards complex interpersonal abilities. The dissociation between impaired cognitive and preserved emotional empathy in clinical HD reinforces the proposal that empathy subtypes are sustained by distinct processes. Finally, these results underline the extent of distinct affective and social impairments in HD and the need to grasp them in clinical contexts.Entities:
Keywords: Empathy; Huntington; Neurodegenerative disease; Social cognition; Social skills
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26869362 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2016.01.070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222