Literature DB >> 28741694

Reduced parahippocampal volume and psychosis symptoms in Alzheimer's disease.

Emma McLachlan1,2, Jennifer Bousfield1, Robert Howard1,2, Suzanne Reeves1,2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Establishing structural imaging correlates of psychosis symptoms in Alzheimer's disease (AD) could localise pathology and target symptomatic treatment. This study investigated whether psychosis symptoms are associated with visuoperceptual or frontal networks, and whether regional brain volume differences could be linked with the paranoid (persecutory delusions) or misidentification (misidentification phenomena and/or hallucinations) subtypes.
METHODS: A total of 104 patients with probable AD (AddNeuroMed; 47 psychotic, 57 non-psychotic), followed up for at least one year with structural MRI at baseline. Presence and subtype of psychosis symptoms were established using the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Volume and cortical thickness measures in visuoperceptual and frontal networks were explored using multivariate analyses to compare with both a global (psychotic versus not) and subtype-specific approach, adjusting for potential confounding factors.
RESULTS: There was a significant main effect of psychosis subtypes on the ventral visual stream region of interest (F30,264  = 1.65, p = 0.021, np2  = 0.16). This was explained by reduced left parahippocampal gyrus volume (F1,97  = 11.1, p = 0.001, np2  = 0.10). When comparisons were made across psychosis subtypes, left parahippocampal volume reduction remained significant (F7,95  = 3.94, p = 0.011, np2  = 0.11) and was greatest for the misidentification and mixed subtypes compared to paranoid and non-psychotic groups.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings implicate the ventral visual stream in psychosis in AD, consistent with integrative theories regarding origins of psychosis, and provide further evidence for a role in the misidentification subtype. Specifically, reduced volume in the parahippocampal gyrus is implicated in misidentification delusion formation, which we hypothesise is due to its role in context attribution.
Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alzheimer's disease; misidentification; parahippocampal gyrus; psychosis; subtypes

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28741694     DOI: 10.1002/gps.4757

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Geriatr Psychiatry        ISSN: 0885-6230            Impact factor:   3.485


  8 in total

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5.  Misidentification Subtype of Alzheimer's Disease Psychosis Predicts a Faster Cognitive Decline.

Authors:  Fabrizia D'Antonio; Suzanne Reeves; Yucheng Sheng; Emma McLachlan; Carlo de Lena; Robert Howard; Julie Bertrand
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8.  Cortical Brain Changes in Patients With Locked-In Syndrome Experiencing Hallucinations and Delusions.

Authors:  Marco Sarà; Riccardo Cornia; Massimiliano Conson; Antonio Carolei; Simona Sacco; Francesca Pistoia
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  8 in total

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