| Literature DB >> 34099005 |
Yaojing Chen1,2, Mingxi Dang1,2, Zhanjun Zhang3,4.
Abstract
Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPSs) are common in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and are associated with accelerated cognitive impairment and earlier deaths. This review aims to explore the neural pathogenesis of NPSs in AD and its association with the progression of AD. We first provide a literature overview on the onset times of NPSs. Different NPSs occur in different disease stages of AD, but most symptoms appear in the preclinical AD or mild cognitive impairment stage and develop progressively. Next, we describe symptom-general and -specific patterns of brain lesions. Generally, the anterior cingulate cortex is a commonly damaged region across all symptoms, and the prefrontal cortex, especially the orbitofrontal cortex, is also a critical region associated with most NPSs. In contrast, the anterior cingulate-subcortical circuit is specifically related to apathy in AD, the frontal-limbic circuit is related to depression, and the amygdala circuit is related to anxiety. Finally, we elucidate the associations between the NPSs and AD by combining the onset time with the neural basis of NPSs.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Brain circuit; Brain lesion pattern; Neuroimaging; Neuropsychiatric symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34099005 PMCID: PMC8186099 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-021-00456-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Summary of clinical assessment scales for neuropsychiatric symptoms
| Measured symptoms | Scale | Applicable population | Scale description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delusions, hallucinations, anxiety, agitation, euphoria, disinhibition, irritability, apathy, aberrant motor behavior, sleep and eating disturbance | Neuropsychiatric Inventory | Generally applicable | Assessment of broader psychopathology; Collect information that may distinguish the different causes of dementia. |
| Paranoid and delusional ideation, hallucinations, activity disturbances, aggressiveness, diurnal rhythm disturbances, affective disturbances, anxieties and phobias | Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer’s disease rating scale | AD | Specifically for patients with AD, excluding the effects of cognitive impairment on measurement. |
| Anxiety, depression, aberrant motor behavior, delusions and hallucinations, disturbance of consciousness | Behavior Rating Scale for Dementia | AD | Detailed content; High variability and sensitivity |
| Psychotic disorders, mood disorders, substance use disorders, anxiety disorders, etc | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders | Generally applicable | The scale included multidimensional and single-dimensional assessments. There were three self-assessment versions: the adult, the child/adolescent, and the parent/guardian. |
| Mental health, walking, eating, diurnal rhythm, aggressive behavior, sexual behavior, incontinence, individual behavioral abnormalities | Present Behavioral Examination | Generally applicable | Interviews were conducted with primary caregivers for patients with dementia or other neuropsychiatric disorders. It assesses behavior over the preceding 4 weeks. |
| Motor, intellectual and emotional functions and different symptoms characteristic for dementia. | Gottfries–Brane–Steen scale | Generally applicable | It can measure changes in dementia symptoms over a certain amount of time and evaluate the effect of treatment. |
| Apathy (Unidimension) | Apathy Evaluation Scale | AD/PD/ stroke | Three versions of the AES (clinician, informant, and self-rated) were used to evaluate the emotional apathy of patients in the past 4 weeks. |
| Dementia Apathy Interview and Rating | AD | Attempt to differentiate limited activity and engagement due to lack of interest from the inability or longstanding, premorbid personality traits through question construction, and interview format. | |
| Apathy Inventory | AD/PD/MCI | It consists of two sets of questionnaires, one for caregivers and the other for patient-based assessments. Each problem involves frequency and severity. | |
| Apathy (Multidimension) | Dimensional Apathy Scale | Generally applicable | A comprehensive and robust measure of multidimensional apathy |
| Lille Apathy Rating Scale | PD | The scale is based on a structured interview, including 33 items, divided into nine domains. Responses are scored on a dichotomous scale. | |
| Apathy Motivation Index | Healthy people | Identified subtypes of apathy in behavioral, social, and emotional domains. | |
| Depression | Hamilton Depression Scale | Mild AD | Emphasis on patient perception and memory; only appropriate for evaluating patients with mild dementia |
| Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia | AD | Accurately distinguish depressive symptoms in AD patients from their cognitive dysfunction | |
| Depressive Signs Scale | Severe dementia | Can not assess depressive symptoms in patients mild or moderate dementia. | |
| The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale | Generally applicable | The scale is a short self-report scale designed to measure depressive symptomatology in the general population. More emphasis is placed on the individual’s emotional physical examination, less on the somatic symptoms of depression. | |
| Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale | People with depression | A clinical interview with ten items, each scored on a scale from 0 to 6, particularly sensitive to treatment effects. | |
| Geriatric depression scale | Elderly with depression | More sensitively examine somatic symptoms specific to older depressed patients, with 30 core items. | |
| Anxiety | Hamilton Anxiety Scale | Generally applicable | Can not distinguish depression and anxiety well; The assessment of AD depression lacks specificity |
| Worry Scale | Mild dementia/ non-dementia adults | The Worry Scale is a brief, unidimensional scale with good reliability and concurrent validity. | |
| Rating Anxiety in Dementia | Dementia | The items in the scale were rated according to the person’s symptoms and signs of anxiety over the previous 2 weeks, including worry, sleep disturbance, irritability, and a number of somatic symptoms | |
| Depression, Anxiety | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | Adults | It contains two subscales of anxiety and depression, each with seven questions. The psychiatric assessment for each patient lasted about 20 min. |
| Aggressive | Rating Scale For Aggressive Behavior in the Elderly | Elderly | Not only to assess patients in nursing homes or hospitals, but also in the community |
| Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory | Generally applicable | The CMAI is a caregivers’ rating questionnaire consisting of 29 agitated behaviors, each rated on a 7-point scale of frequency. A disruptiveness scale was added to later versions. | |
| Sleep disturbance | Women’s Health Initiative Insomnia Rating Scale | Women | A brief, five-item scale evaluating the frequency and intensity of certain sleep difficulties in respondents and requiring between 2 and 5 min |
Abbreviations: AD Alzheimer’s disease, MCI mild cognitive impairment, MMSE Mini-mental State Examination, PD Parkinson’s disease
The onset time of neuropsychiatric symptoms: study characteristics
| Source | Stages | Contrast | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Craig, 2005 [ | Probable AD | MMSE: < 10 vs 10–20 vs > 20 | Depression and apathy were the earliest to appear, and hallucinations, euphoria, and aberrant motor behavior were the latest symptoms to emerge. Hallucinations were significantly more common in severe dementia (MMSE< 10). Irritability was most prevalent in early disease (MMSE> 20). |
| Cheng, 2012 [ | AD | Moderate AD vs mild AD | The prevalence of aberrant motor behavior, delusion, hallucination and sleep disturbance was significantly higher in moderate AD than in mild AD. |
| Burns, 1990 [ | AD | Severe AD vs moderate AD | The prevalence of aberrant motor behavior and sexual disinhibition was significantly higher in severe AD than in moderate AD. |
| Hwang, 2004 [ | aMCI/ Mild AD | aMCI vs controls; mild AD vs aMCI | There were significant differences in apathy, irritability, anxiety, agitation and abnormal motor behavior between the aMCI and controls. Delusion was significantly increased in mild AD compared to aMCI. |
| Iulio, 2010 [ | aMCI/AD | aMCI vs controls; | The prevalence of depression, apathy, agitation and irritability was significantly higher in aMCI than in normal controls. |
| Ehrenberg, 2018 [ | AD | Braak I/II, Braak III/IV, Braak V/VI vs controls | In Braak I/II, significantly increased odds were detected for agitation, anxiety, appetite changes, depression, and sleep disturbances, compared to controls. Increased odds of agitation continue into Braak III/IV. Braak V/VI is associated with higher odds for delusions. |
| Jost, 1996 [ | AD | Time order | Apathy, depression, sleep disturbance and anxiety appeared before the diagnosis of AD. Irritability and delusions occurred within 5 months after diagnosis; Inappropriate sexual behavior, wandering, agitation within 5–10 months after diagnosis; Hallucination and aggression appear 10 months after diagnosis. |
| Linde, 2016 [ | AD | Persistence | Apathy and abnormal behavior showed high persistence; Irritability, agitation, depression and anxiety showed moderate persistence; Delusions, hallucination, appetite changes, and sleep disturbance showed short persistence. |
Abbreviations: AD Alzheimer’s disease, aMCI amnestic mild cognitive impairment, NPSs neuropsychiatric symptoms, MMSE Mini-mental State Examination
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of the onset time of NPSs. Disease progression is divided into five stages: healthy stage, preclinical AD or aMCI, mild AD, moderate AD, and severe AD. Each rise of the curve represents a significant increase in the prevalence of the NPSs compared to the previous stage. Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; aMCI, amnestic mild cognitive impairment
The relationship between NPSs and cognitive dysfunction: study characteristics
| Source | Participants (Number) | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Senanarong, 2005 [ | AD ( | Clock-drawing test correlated with agitation, apathy, and disinhibition; Verbal Fluency correlated with agitation; Activities of Daily Living and Functional Assessment Questionnaire scores correlated with agitation, apathy, and disinhibition; Comportment predicted total NPI-12 score and apathy; Memory predicted agitation/aggression. |
| McPHERSON, 2002 [ | AD ( | AD patients with apathy performed significantly worse on tests of executive function (WAIS–R Digit Symbol, Trail-Making, Stroop Color Interference Test) than AD patients without apathy. |
| Grossi, 2013 [ | AD ( | The apathetic AD had poorer performance than non-apathetic AD on frontal tasks (Inverse Motor Learning test). |
| Jeste, 1992 [ | AD ( | Patients with delusions were significantly more impaired than those without delusions on the MMSE, Blessed Information-Memory-Concentration Test, Dementia Rating Scale (especially its conceptualization and memory subtests), verbal fluency, modified Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, and the Similarities subtest of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-revised. |
| Son, 2013 [ | AD ( | Seventeen AD patients with depression versus 32 patients with dementia only showed decreased immediate recall for a word list and constructional praxis scores. |
| Scarmeas, 2005 [ | Early AD ( | Delusions and hallucinations predict cognitive (Columbia MMSE score) and functional (Blessed Dementia Rating Scale score) decline. |
| Boyle, 2003 [ | AD ( | Apathy correlated with Activities of Daily Living. |
| Chen, 1998 [ | AD ( | Deficits in four executive skills tests were significantly associated with the Agitation/Disinhibition factor score and total neuropsychiatric score on the Neurobehavioral Rating Scale, as well as the Activities subscore on the Blessed Dementia Scale. |
| Sultzer, 2014 [ | AD ( | Patients with delusions had lower Dementia Rating Scale memory subscale scores. |
| Westerberg, 2010 [ | aMCI ( | Inadequate memory consolidation in aMCI patients is related to declines in subjective sleep indices. |
| Rozum, 2017 [ | Severe dementia ( | Comportment (Social Behavior) was correlated with Apathy, while conceptualization (Sorting by Color), language (Naming, Comprehension), memory (Remote Recall, Learning), and visuospatial ability (Figure Tracing, Drawing) were each correlated with agitation/aggression. Comportment and memory were associated with total NPI-12. |
| Nagata, 2010 [ | AD ( | Aberrant motor behaviors correlated with Frontal Assessment Battery total and the subtest scores (lexical fluency, conflicting instructions). |
| Wilson, 2000 [ | AD ( | Compared with AD patients without hallucination, the average annual rate of decline was increased about memory, visuoconstruction, repetition, and naming in those with hallucination. |
| Lopez, 1991 [ | AD ( | AD patients with delusions and hallucinations had a more rapid rate of decline, as measured by the MMSE, a specific defect in receptive language, and a greater frequency of aggression and hostility. |
| Nakaaki, 2008 [ | AD ( | Total Frontal Assessment Battery scores differed significantly between the AD patients with depression/apathy and those without depression/apathy. |
| Onofrio, 2012 [ | AD ( | A significant association was also found between the impairment of the instrumental activities of daily living and agitation/aggression, anxiety, aberrant motor activity, depression, apathy, irritability/lability, sleep and eating disturbances in AD. |
Abbreviations: AD Alzheimer’s disease, aMCI Amnestic mild cognitive impairment, MMSE Mini-mental State Examination, N number, NPI Neuropsychiatric Inventory, Aβ Amyloid-β
Detailed brain changes correlates of neuropsychiatric symptoms in AD
| NPS items | Neuroimaging markers | Author, year | Subject (Number) | Diagnostic criteria | Scale | Structures associated | References no. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apathy | Atrophy | Apostolova, 2007 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral anterior cingulate and left medial frontal cortex | [ |
| Bruen, 2008 | Mild AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate and frontal cortex bilaterally, the head of the left caudate nucleus and in bilateral putamen | [ | ||
| Cortical thinning | Donovan, 2014 | HC ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Inferior temporal region | [ | |
| Apostolova, 2007 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Left cingulate | [ | ||
| Tunnard, 2011 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA and DSM- IV criteria | NPI | Left caudal anterior cingulate cortex and left lateral orbitofrontal cortex, as well as left superior and ventrolateral frontal regions | [ | ||
| FA | Tighe, 2012 | MCI ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, CDR | NPI | Anterior cingulum | [ | |
| Kim, 2011 | Very mild or mild probable AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Left anterior cingulum | [ | ||
| Ota, 2012 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Apathy Scale | Right anterior cingulate, right thalamus, and bilateral parietal regions | [ | ||
| Aβ | Mori, 2014 | Aβ-positive AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral frontal and right anterior cingulate | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Marshall, 2007 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral anterior cingulate region extending inferiorly to the medial orbitofrontal region and the bilateral medial thalamus | [ | |
| Holthoff, 2005 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Left orbitofrontal regions | [ | ||
| Neurofibrillary tangle | Marshall, 2006 | AD ( | CERAD | NPI | Anterior cingulate | [ | |
| Tekin, 2001 | AD ( | CERAD | NPI | Left anterior cingulate | [ | ||
| Depression | Atrophy | Son, 2013 | AD ( | DSM IV-TR criteria | GDS | Left inferior temporal gyrus | [ |
| Zahodne, 2013 | MCI ( | Petersen criteria | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex | [ | ||
| Morra, 2009 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, CDR | GDS | Right hippocampal | [ | ||
| Cortical thickness | Lebedev, 2014 | Mild AD/LBD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | MADRS | Prefrontal and temporal areas | [ | |
| Zahodne, 2013 | MCI ( | Petersen criteria | NPI | Entorhinal cortex | [ | ||
| Lebedeva, 2014 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, DSM-IV/ICD-10 | CSDD, GDS | Left parietal and temporal brain regions, including supramarginal, superior and inferior temporal and fusiform gyri, right posterior cingulate and precuneus | [ | ||
| Gray matter hypodensities | Brommelhoff, 2011 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | History of depression | Caudate nucleus and lentiform nucleus | [ | |
| White matter atrophy | Lee, 2012 | MCI ( | Petersen | NPI | Frontal, parietal, and temporal | [ | |
| Aβ | Chung, 2015 | aMCI ( | Petersen | GDS/NPI | bilateral frontal cortex | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Lee, 2017 | MCI ( | Petersen | HRSD | Right superior frontal gyrus | [ | |
| Hirono, 1998 | AD ( | DSM-IV, NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral superior frontal and left anterior cingulate cortices | [ | ||
| Holthoff, 2005 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Dorsolateral prefrontal regions. | [ | ||
| Anxiety | Atrophy | Poulin, 2011 | Very mild and mild AD (N1 = 90; N2 = 174) | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Amygdala | [ |
| Mah, 2015 | aMCI ( | Petersen | NPI | Entorhinal cortical | [ | ||
| Tagai, 2014 | Mild AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Behave-AD | Right precuneus and inferior parietal lobule | [ | ||
| Nour, 2020 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | left parahippocampal, posterior cingulate gyrus, left insula and bilateral putamen | [ | ||
| White matter hyperintensities | Berlow, 2010 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | – | [ | |
| Bensamoun, 2016 | HC ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | All diagnostic groups: frontal, cingulate, and global cerebral; MCI subgroup: frontal and global cerebral | [ | ||
| Hyperperfusion | Tagai, 2014 | Mild AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Behave-AD | Bilateral anterior cingulate cortices | [ | |
| Hashimoto, 2006 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral entorhinal cortex. Anterior parahippocampal gyrus, left anterior superior temporal gyrus and insula | [ | ||
| Delusion | Atrophy | Serra, 2010 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Right hippocampus | [ |
| Geroldi, 2002 | Mild AD ( | Standardized clinical, neuropsychological, and instrumental evaluation | NPI | Left frontal and right temporal lobe | [ | ||
| Geroldi, 2000 | AD ( | Standardized clinical, neuropsychological, and instrumental evaluation | NPI | Right medial temporal lobe | [ | ||
| Cortical thickness | Whitehead, 2012 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, DSM-IV | NPI | Left medial orbitofrontal and left superior temporal region | [ | |
| FA | Nakaaki, 2013 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Left parieto-occipital region, body of the corpus callosum, superior temporal gyrus | [ | |
| WMH | Anor, 2017 | AD/VaD ( | NIA-AA | NPI | Right frontal | [ | |
| White matter changes | Lee, 2006 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | BRSD | Bilateral frontal, parieto-occipital and left basal gangli | [ | |
| Hypermetabolism | Mentis, 1995 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Sustained reduplicative delusions of misidentification | Sensory association cortices (superior temporal and inferior parietal) | [ | |
| Hirono, 1998 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, DSM-IV | Behave-AD /NPI | Left inferior temporal gyrus | [ | ||
| Hypometabolism | Mentis, 1995 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Sustained reduplicative delusions of misidentification | Paralimbic (orbitofrontal and cingulate areas bilaterally) and left medial temporal areas | [ | |
| Sultzer, 2003 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, NIA-AA | Neurobehavioral Rating Scale | Prefrontal and anterior cingulate regions | [ | ||
| Sultzer, 2014 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, NIA-AA | NPI | Right lateral frontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, and bilateral temporal cortex | [ | ||
| Hirono, 1998 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, DSM-IV | Behave-AD /NPI | Left medial occipital region | [ | ||
| Mega, 2000 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Right and left dorsolateral frontal, left anterior cingulate, and left ventral striatal regions along with the left pulvinar and dorsolateral parietal cortex | [ | ||
| Hallucination | Atrophy | Blanc, 2014 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior part of the right insula, left superior frontal gyrus and lingual gyri | [ |
| Holroyd, 2000 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Subjects/caregiver reported | Occipital lobe | [ | ||
| Cortical thickness | Donovan, 2014 | HC ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Supramarginal | [ | |
| White matter lesions | Lin, 2006 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Subjects/caregiver reported | Occipital lobe | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Blanc, 2014 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Right ventral and dorsolateral prefrontal area | [ | |
| Hypoperfusion | Kotrla, 1995 | AD ( | HRSD, DSM-III-R, Behave-AD | HRSD, DSM-III-R, Behave-AD | Parietal lobe | [ | |
| Hypoperfusion | Mega, 2000 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Right and left dorsolateral frontal, left anterior cingulate, and left ventral striatal regions along with the left pulvinar and dorsolateral parietal cortex | [ | |
| Atrophy | Bruen, 2008 | Mild AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Left insula, and in anterior cingulate cortex bilaterally | [ | |
| Trzepacz, 2013 | AD/MCI ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Frontal, insular, amygdala, cingulate, and hippocampal regions | [ | ||
| Hsu, 2015 | AD ( | NIA-AA | NPI | Posterior cingulate and parieto-occipital sulcus and sulci of the parietal lobes and precuneus | [ | ||
| FA | Tighe, 2012 | MCI ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, CDR | NPI | Anterior cingulum | [ | |
| Increased functional connectivity | Balthazar, 2014 | Mild to moderate AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex and right insula areas | [ | |
| Neurofibrillary tangles | Tekin, 2001 | AD ( | CERAD | NPI | Left orbitofrontal cortex and left anterior cingulate | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Weissberger, 2017 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, NIA-AA | NPI | Right temporal, middle, and superior gyri, Right calcarine cortex, Right lingual gyrus, Right fusiform gyrus, Right cuneus, Bilateral cingulate, middle, and posterior | [ | |
| Irritability | Atrophy | Poulin, 2011 | Very mild and mild AD (N1 = 90; N2 = 174) | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Amygdala | [ |
| FA | Tighe, 2012 | MCI ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, CDR | NPI | Anterior cingulum | [ | |
| Increased functional connectivity | Balthazar, 2014 | Mild to moderate AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex and right insula areas | [ | |
| Aβ | Bensamoun, 2016 | HC ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | All diagnostic groups: frontal, cingulate, parietal and global cerebral; AD:parietal | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Weissberger, 2017 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, NIA-AA | NPI | Right temporal, middle, and superior gyri, Right insula, Right precentral and postcentral gyri, Right frontal, middle, and inferior | [ | |
| Aberrant Motor Behavior | Atrophy | Poulin, 2011 | Very mild and mild AD (N1 = 90; N2 = 174) | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Amygdala | [ |
| Increased functional connectivity | Balthazar, 2014 | Mild to moderate AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex and right insula areas | [ | |
| Hypometabolism | Meguro, 1997 | Moderately severe AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Subjects/caregiver reported | Striatum and the frontal and temporal lobes | [ | |
| Hypermetabolism | Reilly, 2011 | AD ( | DSM-IV | NPI | Orbitofrontal cortex | [ | |
| Neurofibrillary tangles | Tekin, 2001 | AD ( | CERAD | NPI | Left orbitofrontal cortex | [ | |
| Euphoria | Increased functional connectivity | Balthazar, 2014 | Mild to moderate AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex and right insula areas | [ |
| Disinhibition | Atrophy | Serra, 2010 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Bilateral cingulate and right middle frontal gyri | [ |
| Increased functional connectivity | Balthazar, 2014 | Mild to moderate AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | Anterior cingulate cortex and right insula areas | [ | |
| Sleep disturbance | FA | Tighe, 2012 | MCI ( | NINCDS-ADRDA, CDR | NPI | Anterior cingulum | [ |
| Hypometabolism | Liguori, 2017 | AD ( | NIA-AA | Polysomnography | Hypothalamic | [ | |
| Hyperperfusion | Ismail, 2009 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI, CSDD | Right middle frontal gyrus | [ | |
| Appetite disturbance | Atrophy | Grundman, 1996 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Body mass index | Mesial temporal cortex | [ |
| Hypometabolism | Hu, 2002 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | Body mass index | Anterior cingulate cortex | [ | |
| Hypoperfusion | Ismail, 2008 | AD ( | NINCDS-ADRDA | NPI | left anterior cingulate and left orbitofrontal cortices | [ |
Abbreviations: AD Alzheimer’s disease, aMCI amnestic mild cognitive impairment, LBD Lewy body dementia, VaD vascular dementia, HC healthy controls, NPS neuropsychiatric symptom, WMH white matter hyperintensities, GDS Geriatric Depression Scale, MADRS Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, HRSD Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, Behave-AD Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer’s Disease Scale, CDR Clinical Dementia Rating, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, forth version, ICD-10 International Statistical Classification of Disease, tenth version, NIA-AA National Institute on Aging-Alzheimer’s Association workgroups, CERAD Consortium to Establish a Registry for AD
Fig. 2The brain lesion pattern and anterior cingulate-subcortical circuit of apathy. a The lesion brain region with the highest frequency of apathy is the anterior cingulate cortex (especially on the left), followed by the left medial frontal, medial orbitofrontal, medial thalamus, left lateral orbitofrontal, left superior and ventrolateral frontal regions, as well as the parietal, the head of the left caudate nucleus, putamen, and other regions of the frontal lobe. b The anterior cingulate-subcortical circuit begins in the anterior cingulate cortex and projects to the ventral striatum, which includes the nucleus accumbens, ventral putamen, ventromedial caudate, and olfactory tubercle. The ventral striatum has circuit linkages to the ventral pallidum and rostrodorsal substantia nigra. Then the ventral pallidum provides limited input to the mediodorsal thalamus. The anterior cingulate circuit is closed with projections from the dorsal portion of the magnocellular mediodorsal thalamus to the anterior cingulate. Abbreviations: GP: globus pallidus, SN: substantia nigra. b A visual adaptation of a figure from Nobis et al. [13], with permission
Fig. 3The brain lesion patterns and frontal-limbic circuit of depression in AD. a The brain region with the highest frequency of depression lesions is the superior frontal lobe, followed by the left inferior temporal and other frontal regions, as well as other temporal regions, the anterior cingulate, entorhinal, right hippocampal, caudate nucleus, lentiform nucleus, fusiform, right posterior cingulate, precuneus, supramarginal and parietal lobe. b The frontal-limbic circuit is composed of a dorsal part dominated by the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and ventral part dominated by the subgenual cingulate and inferior temporal cortex. A direct projection from the subgeniual cingulate to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and a bidirectional indirect pathway through multiple marginal regions, including the posterior cingulate, hypothalamus, hippocampus, and insula are delineated. Abbreviations: rACC = rostral anterior cingulate; BG = basal ganglia; Th = thalamus. b A visual adaptation of a figure from Mayberg et al. [99], with permission
Fig. 4The brain lesion pattern and amygdala circuit of anxiety in AD. a The anterior and posterior cingulate cortex, entorhinal cortex, parahippocampal gyrus and insula cortex are the highest frequency of anxiety lesion regions, and the second is the amygdala, right precuneus, inferior parietal lobule, left anterior superior temporal, putamen, middle cingulate cortex and the frontal lobe. b The afferent arm of the anxiety circuit includes the exteroceptive sensory systems of the brain, which convey the sensory information contained in anxiety-inducing stimuli to the dorsal thalamus. An exception is the olfactory system, which carries information through the amygdala and entorhinal cortex, not the thalamus. Visceral afferent pathways alter the function of the locus coeruleus and amygdala. The thalamus relays sensory information to the primary sensory receptive areas of the cortex, which project to adjacent unimodal and polymodal cortical association areas. The cortical association areas send projections to the amygdala, entorhinal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, and cingulate gyrus. The efferent pathways involving the amygdala, locus coeruleus, hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray, and striatum mediate autonomic, neuroendocrine, and skeletal-motor responses are associated with anxiety. Abbreviations: BNST = bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. b A visual adaptation of a figure from Charney et al. [100], with permission
Fig. 5The brain lesion patterns of other neuropsychiatric symptoms in AD. The degree of damage to different regions varies with different symptoms, while the anterior cingulate cortex (black box) is an area of common damage for all symptoms and is the most common damaged area for agitation, irritability, disinhibition, and eating disturbances. In addition, delusions are closely associated with damage to the orbitofrontal and superior temporal lobes, followed by the occipital and other areas of the frontotemporal lobes. Hallucinations are associated with damage to the left superior frontal lobe, followed by the occipital, parietal, and dorsolateral prefrontal lobes. Agitation is associated with damage to the posterior cingulate gyrus, followed by the middle cingulate gyrus and insula. Irritability is closely associated with damage to the right insula. Disinhibition is also closely associated with damage to the insula and the middle frontal lobe, cingulate other regions. Aberrant motor behaviour and eating disturbances mainly affect the orbitofrontal area, and sleep disturbances are also associated with the right middle frontal gyrus and hypothalamus