(Press-News.org) Contact information: Daphne Watrin
d.watrin@iospress.nl
31-206-883-355
IOS Press
Parietal gray matter volume changes may be associated with early PD memory deficits
New findings published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease
Amsterdam, NL, 16 January 2014 – Research by a team of investigators in Finland suggests that the free recall memory deficits common even in early stages Parkinson's disease (PD) are related to structural changes in the brain, specifically parietal cortical gray matter volume. Their findings are published in the current issue of the Journal of Parkinson's Disease.
"This study is one of the first to link a discrete area of the brain to a cognitive deficit in people at an early stage of PD, comments lead investigator Ulla Ellfolk, Department of Psychology and Logopedics of Abo Akademi University, and the Division of Clinical Neurosciences, Turku University Hospital, Turku, Finland. "Clinical studies have shown that free recall is more strongly affected than language, performance on simple attention tasks, and visuospatial functioning in newly diagnosed PD patients."
In the current study researchers are using very precise MRI data to localize small brain areas that underlie memory deficits associated with PD. While impaired memory in PD patients has been associated with volume loss in several temporal lobe structures, including the entorhinal cortex, few studies have looked at brain gray matter volume in relation to specific cognitive tasks and even fewer have been able to correlate structural changes with deficits in learning or memory at the earliest disease stages.
One of the reasons previous studies may have failed lies in the memory task chosen for testing. The investigators could not find any correlation between gray matter volume and visual and verbal memory in patients with newly diagnosed PD using conventional memory tasks, but were able to find a significant correlation using a novel, non-intentional incidental memory task that measures free recall. To their surprise, degenerative brain changes in the parietal region were found only on the right side of the brain.
Twenty-eight patients with early PD (disease duration less than 3 years) and 28 healthy controls underwent MRI imaging and neuropsychological testing within a four-week interval. None of the patients were clinically demented and none manifested cognitive deficits that significantly impaired their daily life.
Results from neuropsychological tests showed that the PD patients were significantly impaired compared to controls on tasks that measured incidental free recall, intentional free recall, wordlist learning, and visuospatial control tasks. No differences were found for wordlist delayed recall, wordlist savings percent, and executive control tasks.
The investigators used voxel-based morphometry (VBM) of MRI images, a neuroimaging analysis technique that allows measurement of focal differences in brain anatomy, to see whether they could find brain changes associated with memory impairment. Overall, they could find no statistically significant difference between PD patients and controls in local gray matter volumes, confirming that the PD patients were at early stages of disease.
However, significantly lower scores on the incidental memory task were associated with smaller local gray-matter volume in the right parietal cortex for the whole group and for the PD group alone. No such relationship was found in the control group and no other associations were found for any of the other memory tasks.
To interpret these findings, it is important to understand how the incidental free recall test differs from other memory tasks. In this test, a participant is asked to name items 30-60 from the Boston Naming Test. Naming is followed by asking the subject to recall the previously named items. Unlike intentional memory tests, the subject is not told ahead of time that he will be asked to recall the items. Incidental memory tasks are therefore very similar to real life situations where we are able to recollect content, events, or contexts without a prior intention of memorizing them.
"The most prominent difference between the incidental task and the other memory tasks was the absence of an explicit instruction to memorize items. Thus, no external cues to focus attention on the visual items were available during encoding," says Ellfolk. "This free recall test in particular may be sensitive to right parietal deficits because the parietal region modulates attention to memory and the visual rather than semantic nature of the task is directed to the right side of the brain."
###
PD is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder in the United States, affecting approximately one million Americans and five million people worldwide. Its prevalence is projected to double by 2030. The most obvious symptoms are movement-related, such as involuntary shaking and muscle stiffness. Non-motor symptoms, such as worsening depression, anxiety, cognitive impairments, and sleep disturbances, can appear prior to the onset of motor symptoms.
Parietal gray matter volume changes may be associated with early PD memory deficits
New findings published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease
2014-01-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Penn Museum team finds evidence for 3,000+-year-old 'Nordic grog' tradition
2014-01-17
Penn Museum team finds evidence for 3,000+-year-old 'Nordic grog' tradition
Discovery highlights innovative and complex fermented beverages of northernmost Europe in the Bronze and Iron Ages
From northwest Denmark, circa 1500-1300 BC, to the Swedish island of Gotland ...
Higher vitamin D levels associated with better cognition and mood in PD patients
2014-01-17
Higher vitamin D levels associated with better cognition and mood in PD patients
Findings published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease
Amsterdam, NL, 16 January 2014 – A new study exploring vitamin D levels in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) opens up the possibility ...
Sarcophagus leads Penn Museum team in Egypt to the tomb of a previously unknown pharaoh
2014-01-17
Sarcophagus leads Penn Museum team in Egypt to the tomb of a previously unknown pharaoh
Discovery provides evidence of a forgotten Egyptian dynasty from 3,600 years ago
Archaeologists working at the southern Egyptian site of Abydos have discovered the tomb of a previously ...
Big-headed fossil flies track major ecological revolution
2014-01-17
Big-headed fossil flies track major ecological revolution
Simon Fraser University's Bruce Archibald and Rolf Mathewes are part of a team of biologists, including Christian Kehlmaier from Germany's Senkenberg Natural History Collections, that has discovered three new, ...
Statin use reduces delirium in critically ill patients
2014-01-17
Statin use reduces delirium in critically ill patients
Continued use of statins may help prevent delirium in critically ill patients who received statins before hospital admission, according to a new study of 470 intensive care patients in the UK.
"This is the first ...
Vitamin D supplements reduce pain in fibromyalgia sufferers
2014-01-17
Vitamin D supplements reduce pain in fibromyalgia sufferers
Researchers say Vitamin D may be cost-effective treatment or adjunct for patients with fibromyalgia syndrome and low vitamin D levels, reports PAIN®
Philadelphia, January 17, 2014 – Patients with fibromyalgia ...
VHIO genomic study identifies subgroups of HER2+ breast cancer with varying sensitivities
2014-01-17
VHIO genomic study identifies subgroups of HER2+ breast cancer with varying sensitivities
VHIO describes as many as 4 subgroups of HER2+ breast cancer (Luminal A, Luminal B, HER2-enriched and Basal-Like) with varying responses and benefits resulting from combined ...
2 diabetes studies in January 2014 Health Affairs
2014-01-16
2 diabetes studies in January 2014 Health Affairs
January articles examine the toll of diabetes, both in the US and abroad
Poorer Americans: depleted food budgets can mean higher risk of hypoglycemia.
For generations, economists have noted that low-income households spend ...
BYU's smart object recognition algorithm doesn't need humans
2014-01-16
BYU's smart object recognition algorithm doesn't need humans
Highly accurate system learns to decipher images on its own
If we've learned anything from post-apocalyptic movies it's that computers eventually become self-aware and try to eliminate humans.
BYU engineer ...
2-proton bit controlled by a single copper atom
2014-01-16
2-proton bit controlled by a single copper atom
Just a single foreign atom located in the vicinity of a molecule can change spatial arrangement of its atoms. In a spectacular experiment, an international team of researchers was able ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Mayo Clinic study reveals hidden causes of heart attacks in younger adults, especially women
Target: BP initiative helps more than 10M adults with hypertension
New initiative launched to improve care for people with certain types of heart failure
You’ve never seen corn like this before
Mediterranean diet could reduce gum disease
Mount Sinai launches cardiac catheterization artificial intelligence research lab
Why AI is never going to run the world
Stress in the strands: Hair offers clues to children’s mental health
UCLA distinguished professor, CVD researcher to receive 2025 Basic Research Prize
UT San Antonio School of Public Health: The People’s School
‘Preventable deaths will continue’ without action to make NHS more accessible for autistic people, say experts
Scientists shoot lasers into brain cells to uncover how illusions work
Your ecosystem engineer was a dinosaur
New digital cognitive test for diagnosing Alzheimer's disease
Parents of children with health conditions less confident about a positive school year
New guideline standardizes consent for research participants in Canada
Research as reconciliation: Oil sands and health
AI risks overwriting history and the skills of historians have never been more important, leading academic outlines in new paper
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology: Higher doses of semaglutide can safely enhance weight loss and improve health for adults living with obesity, two new clinical trials confirm
Trauma focused therapy shows promise for children struggling with PTSD
School meals could drive economic growth and food system transformation
Home training for cerebellar ataxias
Dry eyes affect over half the general population, yet only a fifth receive diagnosis and treatment
Researchers sound warning about women with type 2 diabetes taking oral HRT
Overweight and obesity don’t always increase the risk of an early death, Danish study finds
Cannabis use associated with a quadrupling of risk of developing type 2 diabetes, finds study of over 4 million adults
Gestational diabetes linked to cognitive decline in mothers and increased risk of developmental delays, ADHD and autism among children
Could we use eye drops instead of reading glasses as we age?
Patients who had cataracts removed or their eyesight corrected with a new type of lens have good vision over all distances without spectacles
AI can spot which patients need treatment to prevent vision loss in young adults
[Press-News.org] Parietal gray matter volume changes may be associated with early PD memory deficitsNew findings published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease