| Literature DB >> 29209182 |
Jonathan Del-Monte1, Sophie Bayard2, Pierluigi Graziani1, Marie C Gély-Nargeot2.
Abstract
Apathy is one of the most frequent non-motor manifestations in Parkinson's disease (PD) that can lead to a whole range of deleterious outcomes. In 2006, Levy and Dubois proposed a model that distinguishes three different apathy aetiologies in PD divided into three subtypes of disrupted processing: "emotional-affective," "cognitive," and "auto-activation." These three dimensions associated with dopamine depletion present in the pathology would lead to the emergence of apathy in PD. The aim of this mini-review was to describe and discuss studies that have explore links between apathy and the three subtypes of disrupted processing proposed by Levy and Dubois (2006) and as well as the links between these dimensions and dopamine depletion in Parkinson's disease. The lack of consensus regarding the emotional-affective correlates of apathy and the lack of evidence supporting the hypothesis of the auto-activation deficit, do not clearly confirm the validity of Levy and Dubois's model. Furthermore, the suggested association between dopaminergic depletion and apathy must also be clarified.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; apathy; auto-activation deficits; cognitive deficits; emotional deficits
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209182 PMCID: PMC5702439 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Studies assessing links between cognitive dimension and apathy in PD.
| Varanese et al., | Apathy: | – | Apathy evaluation scale | Short term memory / Recall / Recognition / Learning / Working memory / Attention | – | – | – | Groups differed in recall ( |
| Bogdanova and Cronin-Golomb, | 22 | 22 | Apathy scale | Global cognitive functioning / Verbal fluency / Working memory / Attention / Executive functions / Visuospatial / Reading task / Verbal command | Alexithymia | – | – | |
| Robert et al., | 45 | – | Apathy evaluation scale | Global cognitive functioning / Executive functions / Verbal fluency | – | – | Right inferior frontal gyrus (BA47) Right middle frontal gyrus (BA10) Right cuneus (BA18) | No correlation between apathy and cognitive functions |
| Reijnders et al., | 55 | – | Apathy evaluation scale / Neuropsychiatric inventory / Lille apathy rating scale | Global cognitive functioning | – | No correlation between apathy and cognitive functions | ||
| Isella et al., | 30 | 25 | Apathy scale Gp1 ( | Global cognitive functioning / Memory / Visuospatial / Verbal fluency / Executive functions | – | – | Frontotemporal lobe Temporal lobe | Positive correlation between apathy scores and executive functions performances Positive correlation between apathy scores and bilateral temporal atrophy |
| Alzahrani and Venneri, | Apathy evaluation scale / Neuropsychiatric inventory / Lille apathy rating scale | Global cognitive functioning / Executive functions | – | – | Bilateral anterior cingulate Orbitofrontal cortex Frontotemporal lobe Temporal lobe Precentral, frontal, orbito-frontal, fusiform and cingulate gyri Insula Left supplementary motor regions | Correlation between apathy level and cognitive performances in 14 studies Correlation between apathy level and brain areas altered in 6 studies | ||
Studies assessing links between emotional dimension, auto-activation dimension, dopamine depletion and apathy in PD.
| Bogdanova and Cronin-Golomb, | 22 | 22 | Apathy scale | Global cognitive functioning / Verbal fluency / Working memory / Attention / Executive functions / Visuospatial / Reading task / Verbal command | Alexithymia | – | – | |
| Drapier et al., | 17 | – | Apathy evaluation scale | Executive functions | Facial affect recognition | – | Subthalamic nucleus—Deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) | No differences on facial recognition performances between pre- and post STN-DBS |
| Robert et al., | 36 | – | Apathy evaluation scale | Global cognitive functioning | Facial emotion recognition | – | Left posterior gyrus | Low negative correlation between apathy scores and facial emotion recognition (sadness and surprise) |
| Martínez-Corral et al., | Apathy: | 16 | Clinical interview | Global cognitive functioning | Facial emotion recognition | – | – | Groups differed on FER (fear, sadness and anger): |
| Louis et al., | Essential T: | 80 | Apathy evaluation scale | Global cognitive functioning / Executive functions | – | – | – | Groups differed on Apathy: |
| Hassan et al., | 26 | Apathy Scale | – | – | Postural instability and gait initiation | – | Significant association between apathy level and postural instability | |
| Funkiewiez et al., | 69 | – | Unified Parkinson's disease rating scale | Global cognitive functioning / Executive functions / Memory | – | – | Subthalamic nucleus | Groups differed on cognitive function between pre-and post STN-DBS: |
| Thobois et al., | Apathy: | – | Starkstein apathy scale unified Parkinson's disease rating scale | Global cognitive functioning | – | Dopaminergic stimulation of D2/D3 receptors | Apathy reversible with dopamine agonist | |
| Thobois et al., | Dopamine Agonist: | – | Starkstein apathy scale robert inventory | – | – | – | Dopaminergic stimulation of D2/D3 receptors | Significant apathy reduction in DA group compared to placebo group |
| Castrioto et al., | Apathy evaluation scale | Executive functions/Working memory/Verbal fluency/Reaction time/Decision making | Reward sensitivity/facial emotion recognition/Emotion discrimination | Subthalamic nucleus and Globus pallidus deep brain stimulation Cingulate cortex/Ventral striatum/Angular gyrus/Orbitofrontal cortex/Insular/Temporal gyrus | Increased apathy induced by dopaminergic treatment reduction allowed by STN-DBS | |||