| Literature DB >> 32373055 |
Maï-Carmen Requena-Komuro1, Charles R Marshall1,2, Rebecca L Bond1, Lucy L Russell1, Caroline Greaves1, Katrina M Moore1, Jennifer L Agustus1, Elia Benhamou1, Harri Sivasathiaseelan1, Chris J D Hardy1, Jonathan D Rohrer1, Jason D Warren1.
Abstract
Our awareness of time, specifically of longer intervals spanning hours, days, months, and years, is critical for ensuring our sense of self-continuity. Disrupted time awareness over such intervals is a clinical feature in a number of frontotemporal dementia syndromes and Alzheimer's disease, but has not been studied and compared systematically in these diseases. We used a semi-structured caregiver survey to capture time-related behavioral alterations in 71 patients representing all major sporadic and genetic syndromes of frontotemporal dementia, in comparison to 28 patients with typical Alzheimer's disease and nine with logopenic aphasia, and 32 healthy older individuals. Survey items pertained to apparent difficulties ordering past personal events or estimating time intervals between events, temporal rigidity and clockwatching, and propensity to relive past events. We used a logistic regression model including diagnosis, age, gender, and disease severity as regressors to compare the proportions of individuals exhibiting each temporal awareness symptom between diagnostic groups. Gray matter associations of altered time awareness were assessed using voxel-based morphometry. All patient groups were significantly more prone to exhibit temporal awareness symptoms than healthy older individuals. Clinical syndromic signatures were identified. While patients with typical and logopenic Alzheimer's disease most frequently exhibited disturbed event ordering or interval estimation, patients with semantic dementia were most prone to temporal rigidity and clockwatching and those with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia commonly exhibited all these temporal symptoms as well as a propensity to relive past events. On voxel-based morphometry, the tendency to relive past events was associated with relative preservation of a distributed left-sided temporo-parietal gray matter network including hippocampus. These findings reveal a rich and complex picture of disturbed temporal awareness in major dementia syndromes, with stratification of frontotemporal dementia syndromes from Alzheimer's disease. This is the first study to assess symptoms of altered temporal awareness across frontotemporal dementia syndromes and provides a motivation for future work directed to the development of validated clinical questionnaires, analysis of underlying neurobiological mechanisms and design of interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; clockwatching; frontotemporal dementia; primary progressive aphasia; semantic dementia; time perception; voxel-based morphometry
Year: 2020 PMID: 32373055 PMCID: PMC7186333 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
General demographic, clinical and neuropsychological characteristics of participant groups.
| No. (M/F) | 32 (16/16) | 34 (26/8) | 17 (10/7) | 20 (10/10) | 9 (8/1) | 28 (13/15) |
| Age (y) | 68.2 (6.9) | 65.8 (6.9) | 66.5 (7.5) | 68.5 (8.4) | 69.2 (9.6) | 70.4 (7.8) |
| Handedness (R/L) | 29/2 | 32/1 | 17/0 | 18/1 | 8/1 | 25/2 |
| Education (y) | 16.1 (2.4) | 13.8 (4.0) | 15.0 (2.9) | 13.6 (2.5) | 16.2 (2.1) | 14.9 (2.0) |
| MMSE (/30) | 29.8 (0.4) | 22.4 (6.4) | 21.8 (8.0) | 18.4 (9.5) | 13.1 (7.8) | 18.1 (6.6) |
| Symptom dur (y) | N/A | 7.2 (5.0) | 6.1 (2.4) | 4.3 (2.4) | 5.2 (1.9) | 6.9 (3.6) |
| Medication use | 2 (0.6) | 16 (47) | 6 (35) | 8 (40) | 2 (22) | 13 (46) |
| WASI VIQ | 123.7 (8.2) | |||||
| WASI PIQ | 125.2 (12.9) | 114.5 (17.5) | ||||
| RMT Words (/50) | 48.8 (1.2) | |||||
| RMT Words (/25) | 24.7 (0.8) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| RMT Faces (/50) | 43.9 (5.0) | |||||
| RMT Faces (/25) | 24.6 (0.7) | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| DS-F (max) | 7.2 (1.1) | 6.6 (0.9) | ||||
| DS-R (max) | 5.5 (1.3) | 5.0 (1.5) | ||||
| D-KEFS Stroop: | ||||||
| Color (s) | 30.1 (4.9) | |||||
| Word (s) | 23.3 (5.0) | 32.0 (18.4) | ||||
| Interference (s) | 54.8 (13.2) | |||||
| Fluency: | ||||||
| Verbal (total) | 17.7 (5.7) | |||||
| Category (total) | 24.6 (5.4) | |||||
| TMT A (s) | 31.1 (9.2) | 53.5 (27.7) | ||||
| TMT B (s) | 60.2 (24.1) | |||||
| BPVS (/150) | 148.0 (1.4) | |||||
| GNT (/30) | 26.6 (2.7) | |||||
| VOSP (/20) | 18.9 (1.2) | |||||
Mean (standard deviation) values are shown unless otherwise indicated (maximum scores on neuropsychological tests are in parentheses); significant differences in performance between healthy controls and patient groups (p < 0.05) are coded in bold.
based on data from an historical cohort of 24 healthy older controls and six patients with AD from the present cohort;
includes medications with a potentially relevant effect on time perception (see text).
A reduced number of participants completed certain tests, as follows:
n-1,
n-2,
n-3,
n-4,
n-7,
n-9,
n-11.
AD, patient group with typical Alzheimer's disease; BPVS, British Picture Vocabulary Scale (.
Survey used to identify alterations in temporal awareness.
| Ordering past events | Confusion about the order in which personal events have happened |
| Estimating intervals between events | Difficulty estimating how long ago personal events occurred/how far in the future events will occur |
| Temporal rigidity | Intolerant of delays, anxiety or irritation about missing appointments or late arrivals, insistence on doing things at a particular time |
| Clockwatching | Tendency to “watch the clock” or preoccupation with the time |
| Re-living past events | Tendency to re-live personal events or episodes from the past |
Survey symptom items were chosen based on clinical observations of target disease groups and informed by previous studies of temporal awareness in the healthy brain (see text). The questionnaire was completed by healthy control participants themselves and by patients' primary caregivers. Respondents were asked to indicate whether or not prominent changes (i.e., evident most days) had occurred, for each of the sampled symptoms of temporal awareness. Caregivers were asked to decide whether changes had occurred comparing patients' current behavior with their behavior when well; healthy controls were asked to decide if changes had occurred in their own behavior over the past 10 years.
Proportions of participant groups with altered time awareness.
| Ordering past events | 0% | 62% | 12% | 15% | 56% | 68% |
| Estimating intervals between events | 0% | 59% | 18% | 35% | 67% | 79% |
| Temporal rigidity | 0% | 41% | 65% | 35% | 11% | 11% |
| Clockwatching | 3% | 44% | 59% | 35% | 22% | 18% |
| Re-living past events | 9% | 59% | 47% | 25% | 22% | 21% |
Data derived from the customized questionnaire (see text and .
Results of the logistic regression analysis over the patient cohort.
| Ordering past events | Diagnosis | |||
| 0.94 | 0.28–3.12 | 0.926 | ||
| 0.06 | 0.01–0.35 | |||
| 0.06 | 0.01–0.30 | |||
| 0.34 | 0.06–1.91 | 0.219 | ||
| Gender (F) | 0.91 | 0.33–2.50 | 0.852 | |
| Age | 0.97 | 0.92–1.04 | 0.407 | |
| MMSE | 0.92 | 0.86–0.98 | ||
| Constant | 71.55 | 0.77–6633.90 | 0.065 | |
| Estimating intervals between events | Diagnosis | |||
| 0.51 | 0.14–1.82 | 0.302 | ||
| 0.06 | 0.01–0.31 | |||
| 0.12 | 0.03–0.49 | |||
| 0.33 | 0.05–2.02 | 0.232 | ||
| Gender (F) | 1.03 | 0.39–2.71 | 0.948 | |
| Age | 0.99 | 0.93–1.05 | 0.666 | |
| MMSE | 0.91 | 0.86–0.97 | ||
| Constant | 51.48 | 0.62–4292.08 | 0.081 | |
| Temporal rigidity | Diagnosis | |||
| 5.50 | 1.24–24.40 | |||
| 17.33 | 3.30–91.09 | |||
| 5.29 | 1.11–25.14 | |||
| 1.04 | 0.09–12.41 | 0.975 | ||
| Gender (F) | 0.52 | 0.19–1.41 | 0.197 | |
| Age | 1.05 | 0.99–1.11 | 0.132 | |
| MMSE | 1.04 | 0.98–1.11 | 0.203 | |
| Constant | 0.00 | 0.00–0.29 | ||
| Clockwatching | Diagnosis | |||
| 4.44 | 1.21–16.35 | |||
| 8.98 | 2.09–38.58 | |||
| 2.80 | 0.70–11.12 | 0.146 | ||
| 0.90 | 0.13–6.41 | 0.919 | ||
| Gender (F) | 0.48 | 0.18–1.24 | 0.130 | |
| Age | 1.06 | 1.00–1.12 | 0.054 | |
| MMSE | 10.98 | 0.92–1.04 | 0.450 | |
| Constant | 0.01 | 0.00–0.57 | ||
| Re-living past events | Diagnosis | |||
| 3.49 | 1.05–11.63 | |||
| 2.40 | 0.61–9.47 | 0.212 | ||
| 1.12 | 0.28–4.47 | 0.875 | ||
| 1.06 | 0.16–6.93 | 0.951 | ||
| Gender (F) | 0.66 | 0.26–1.66 | 0.378 | |
| Age | 0.97 | 0.91–1.02 | 0.256 | |
| MMSE | 1.04 | 0.98–1.11 | 0.154 | |
| Constant | 1.56 | 0.03–96.61 | 0.832 |
The Alzheimer's disease group is the reference for comparisons between diagnostic groups; significant associations with particular variables (p < 0.05) are coded in bold. bvFTD, patient group with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia; CI, confidence interval; F, female; LPA, patient group with logopenic progressive aphasia; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination score; OR, odds ratio; PNFA, patient group with progressive non-fluent aphasia; SD, patient group with semantic dementia.
Neuroanatomical associations of altered time awareness in the patient cohort.
| Middle temporal gyrus/superior temporal sulcus | L | 118 | −50 | −3 | −26 | 3.95 | 0.038 |
| Hippocampus | L | 31 | −22 | −33 | −4 | 3.74 | 0.019 |
| Posterior cingulate | L | 184 | −2 | −24 | 33 | 4.52 | 0.015 |
| Superior parietal lobule | L | 75 | −32 | −57 | 51 | 4.23 | 0.038 |
The table presents the locations of regional gray matter positively correlated with tendency to re-live past events (the only significant association of altered time awareness identified) over the combined patient cohort, based on voxel-based morphometry (see text and .
Figure 1Gray matter associations of altered temporal awareness in the patient cohort. Statistical parametric maps show regional gray matter volume positively associated with the propensity to re-live past events across all syndromic groups (see text and Tables 2, 3 for details). For display purposes, maps have been rendered on coronal sections of the group mean template T1-weighted MR brain image and thresholded at p < 0.001, uncorrected for multiple voxel-wise comparisons over the whole brain volume (areas significant at pFWE < 0.05 after correction for multiple comparisons within pre-specified neuroanatomical regions of interest are summarized in Table 5); the y-coordinate (mm) in MNI space of the plane of each section is indicated. The color bar codes voxel-wise T scores. The left hemisphere is shown on the left in all sections. The sections traverse the following key structures: (A) anterior middle temporal gyrus/superior temporal sulcus. (B) posterior hippocampus. (C) posterior cingulate cortex. (D) superior parietal lobule.