| Literature DB >> 35126298 |
Giorgi Kuchukhidze1,2, Iris Unterberger3, Elisabeth Schmid1, Laura Zamarian3, Christian Michael Siedentopf4, Florian Koppelstaetter5, Elke Gizewski4, Martin Kronbichler2,6, Gerhard Luef3, Hennric Jokeit7, Eugen Trinka1,2,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Amygdalae play a central role in emotional processing by interconnecting frontal cortex and other brain structures. Unilateral amygdala enlargement (AE) is associated with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE). In a relatively large sample of patients with mTLE and AE, we aimed to evaluate functional integration of AE in emotion processing and to determine possible associations between fMRI activation patterns in amygdala and deficits in emotion recognition as assessed by neuropsychological testing.Entities:
Keywords: amygdala; emotion recognition; epilepsy surgery; fMRI; temporal lobe epilepsy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35126298 PMCID: PMC8815259 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.803787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Characteristics of patients and healthy controls.
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| Age in years, mean (SD) | 31 (8.6) | 35 (10.3) | |
| Sex (female; male) | 9; 8 | 10; 12 | |
| Education in years, mean (SD) | 10.73 (5.7) | 12.14 (3.5) | |
| Handedness (right; left) | 15; 2 | 19; 3 | |
| MWT-B (estimated IQ), mean (SD) | 115.40 (12.4) | 101.82 (10.35) |
Figure 1fMRI activation patterns in amygdala lesions. (A) BOLD signal in left amygdala, contralateral to the AE on the right. (B) BOLD signal in amygdala bilaterally, however more on the right than on the left (left-sided AE).
BOLD signal in patients.
| Ipsilateral to amygdala lesion | 7 (7 TLE L) |
| Contralateral to amygdala lesion | 6 (4 TLE L; 2 TLE R) |
| No BOLD | 9 (6 TLE L; 3 TLE R) |
fMRI activation patterns in TLE patients and healthy controls.
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| Healthy controls (N, %) | 5 (29%) | 8 (47%) | 2 (12%) | 2 (12%) | 17 (100%) |
| Patients (N, %) | 9 (41%) | 5 (23%) | 4 (18%) | 4 (18%) | 22 (100%) |
| TLE L (N) | 6 | 5 |
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| 17 |
| TLE R (N) | 3 | 0 |
| 0 | 5 |
Performance of TLE patients and healthy controls on the CATS quotients expressed as Z scores.
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| Affect Recognition Quotient | 1.00 (-1.00 – 2.00) | 0.20 (-1.3 – 1.00) | |
| Prosody Recognition Quotient | −0.40 (-2.90 – 2.00) | −1.00 (-4.70 – 0.80) | |
| Emotion Recognition Quotient | 0.40 (-1.60 – 2.20) | −0.85 (-3.50 – 0.40) | |
| Simple Facial Scale | 0.40 (-1.60 – 2.20) | 0.60 (-0.90 – 1.20) | |
| Complex Facial Scale | 0.90 (-1.30 – 2.00) | −0.20 (-2.00 – 1.10) | |
| Prosody Scale | −0.40 (-0.50 – 1.60) | −1.00 (-4.60 – 0.80) | |
| Lexical Scale | −0.80 (-1.30 – 0.30) | −0.90 (-2.70 – 0.30) | |
| Discrete Emotion Scales: | |||
| Happy | 0.30 (0.30 – 0.30) | 0.30 (-2,60 – 0.30) | |
| Surprised | 0.10 (-1.70 – 1.00) | −0.80 (-2.70 – 1.00) | |
| Fear | 1.10 (-2.30 – 1.90) | 0.20 (-2.30 – 1.50) | |
| Sad | −0.40 (-2.50 – 0.30) | −1.50 (-6.60 – 0.30) | |
| Angry | 0.00 (-1.00 – 1.60) | −1.00 (-1.50 – 1.10) | |
| Disgusted | 0.70 (-2.00 – 1.20) | −0.15 (-2.00 – 1.00) |
Mann-Whitney-U-Test is significant at the p <0.05 level (two-tailed).
Results of each group on the Ekman 60 Faces Test.
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| Anger | 9 (6–10) | 8 (5–10) | |
| Disgust | 9 (5–10) | 7,5 (3–10) | |
| Fear | 6 (2–10) | 4.5 (1–10) | |
| Happiness | 10 (9–10) | 10 (8–10) | |
| Sadness | 8 (7–10) | 8 (2–10) | |
| Surprise | 9 (7–10) | 9 (5–10) | |
| Total score | 53 (44–57) | 44.5 (38–59) |
Mann-Whitney-U-Test is significant at the p <0.05 level (two-tailed).
Results of each group on HADS.
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| Anxiety (HADS-A) | 0.458 | ||
| Score ≤ 7 | 12 (80%) | 13 (65%) | |
| Score 8–10 | 3 (20%) | 5 (25%) | |
| Score ≥11 | 0 (0%) | 2 (10%) | |
| Depression (HADS-D) | 0.244 | ||
| Score ≤ 7 | 15 (100%) | 17 (85%) | |
| Score 8–10 | 0 (0%) | 3 (15%) | |
| Score ≥11 | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |