scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain and temperature processing in dementia: a clinical and neuroanatomical analysis

01 Nov 2015-Brain (Oxford University Press)-Vol. 138, Iss: 11, pp 3360-3372
TL;DR: Using a semi-structured caregiver questionnaire and MRI voxel-based morphometry in patients with frontotemporal degeneration or Alzheimer’s disease, Fletcher et al. show that symptoms are underpinned by atrophy in a distributed thalamo-temporo-insular network implicated in somatosensory processing.
Abstract: Symptoms suggesting altered processing of pain and temperature have been described in dementia diseases and may contribute importantly to clinical phenotypes, particularly in the frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum, but the basis for these symptoms has not been characterized in detail. Here we analysed pain and temperature symptoms using a semi-structured caregiver questionnaire recording altered behavioural responsiveness to pain or temperature for a cohort of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (n = 58, 25 female, aged 52-84 years, representing the major clinical syndromes and representative pathogenic mutations in the C9orf72 and MAPT genes) and a comparison cohort of patients with amnestic Alzheimer's disease (n = 20, eight female, aged 53-74 years). Neuroanatomical associations were assessed using blinded visual rating and voxel-based morphometry of patients' brain magnetic resonance images. Certain syndromic signatures were identified: pain and temperature symptoms were particularly prevalent in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (71% of cases) and semantic dementia (65% of cases) and in association with C9orf72 mutations (6/6 cases), but also developed in Alzheimer's disease (45% of cases) and progressive non-fluent aphasia (25% of cases). While altered temperature responsiveness was more common than altered pain responsiveness across syndromes, blunted responsiveness to pain and temperature was particularly associated with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (40% of symptomatic cases) and heightened responsiveness with semantic dementia (73% of symptomatic cases) and Alzheimer's disease (78% of symptomatic cases). In the voxel-based morphometry analysis of the frontotemporal lobar degeneration cohort, pain and temperature symptoms were associated with grey matter loss in a right-lateralized network including insula (P < 0.05 corrected for multiple voxel-wise comparisons within the prespecified anatomical region of interest) and anterior temporal cortex (P < 0.001 uncorrected over whole brain) previously implicated in processing homeostatic signals. Pain and temperature symptoms accompanying C9orf72 mutations were specifically associated with posterior thalamic atrophy (P < 0.05 corrected for multiple voxel-wise comparisons within the prespecified anatomical region of interest). Together the findings suggest candidate cognitive and neuroanatomical bases for these salient but under-appreciated phenotypic features of the dementias, with wider implications for the homeostatic pathophysiology and clinical management of neurodegenerative diseases.

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the recent advances in diagnosis and understanding of Behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and also potential markers of disease progression and early diagnosis that may aid in the development of treatment options, which have thus far eluded them.
Abstract: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), particularly the behavioural variant (bvFTD) form, has fascinated researchers. Recent years have seen an increasing interest in aspects of bvFTD that extend beyond the initial focus on cognitive changes and frontal executive dysfunction. Changes have been identified in aspects including fundamental changes in physiology and metabolism, and cognitive domains such as episodic memory. Work on social cognition has emphasised the importance of a breakdown in interpreting and expressing emotions, while the overlap between psychiatric disorders and bvFTD has been brought into focus by the finding of high rates of psychotic features in carriers of the c9orf72 gene expansion. We review these aspects in the chapter " Behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia: Recent advances in diagnosis and understanding of the disorder" and also potential markers of disease progression and early diagnosis that may aid in the development of treatment options, which have thus far eluded us.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Frontotemporal dementia is associated with complex changes in eating behavior and metabolism, which potentially affect disease pathogenesis and survival and whether these changes are centrally mediated.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is associated with complex changes in eating behavior and metabolism, which potentially affect disease pathogenesis and survival. It is currently not known if body composition changes and changes in fat deposition also exist in FTD, the relationship of these changes in eating behavior and appetite, and whether these changes are centrally mediated. METHODS Body composition was measured in 28 people with behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), 16 with Alzheimer's disease (AD), and 19 healthy controls, using dual energy x-ray absorptiometry. Changes in body composition were correlated to brain grey matter atrophy using voxel-based morphometry on high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS Behavioral-variant FTD was characterized by changes in body composition, with increased total fat mass, visceral adipose tissue area (VAT area), and android: gynoid ratio compared to control and AD participants (all P values < 0.05). Changes in body composition correlated to abnormal eating behavior and behavioral change (P < 0.01) and functional decline (P < 0.01). Changes in body composition also correlated to grey matter atrophy involving a distributed neural network that included the hippocampus, amygdala, nucleus accumbens, insula, cingulate, and cerebellum - structures known to be central to autonomic control - as well as the thalamus, putamen, accumbens, and caudate, which are involved in reward processing. CONCLUSIONS Changes in body composition and fat deposition extend the clinical phenomenology in bvFTD beyond cognition and behavior, with changes associated with changes in reward and autonomic processing suggesting that these deficits may be central in FTD.

11 citations


Cites background from "Pain and temperature processing in ..."

  • ...The presence of autonomic dysfunction in FTD is increasingly recognized with reported changes in thermoregulation, pain sensation, and other symptoms related to autonomic dysfunction.(23,24) Changes in heart rate variability have also been related to abnormalities in key central structures known to control autonomic function including the insula and anterior cingulate cortex....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the current evidence for pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment of non-motor dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and highlight the need to further integrate non motor dysfunction as an important outcome measure for future clinical trial design is provided in this paper.
Abstract: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disease typically presenting with bulbar or limb weakness. There is increasing evidence that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a multisystem disease with early and frequent impacts on cognition, behaviour, sleep, pain and fatigue. Dysfunction of normal physiological and metabolic processes also appears common. Evidence from pre-symptomatic studies and large epidemiological cohorts examining risk factors for the future development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis have reported a high prevalence of changes in behaviour and mental health before the emergence of motor weakness. This suggests that changes beyond the motor system are underway at an early stage with dysfunction across brain networks regulating a variety of cognitive, behavioural and other homeostatic processes. The full impact of non-motor dysfunction continues to be established but there is now sufficient evidence that the presence of non-motor symptoms impacts overall survival in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and with up to 80% reporting non-motor symptoms, there is an urgent need to develop more robust therapeutic approaches. This review provides a contemporary overview of the pathobiology of non-motor dysfunction, offering readers a practical approach with regard to assessment and management. We review the current evidence for pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment of non-motor dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and highlight the need to further integrate non-motor dysfunction as an important outcome measure for future clinical trial design.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Altered responsiveness to pain was present to a significantly greater extent in symptomatic C9orf72 expansion carriers than in controls, likely representing a disruption in somatosensory, homeostatic and semantic processing, underpinned by atrophy in a thalamo-cortico-striatal network.
Abstract: Objective Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is typically associated with changes in behaviour, language and movement. However, recent studies have shown that patients can also develop an abnormal response to pain, either heightened or diminished. We aimed to investigate this symptom in mutation carriers within the Genetic FTD Initiative (GENFI). Methods Abnormal responsiveness to pain was measured in 462 GENFI participants: 281 mutation carriers and 181 mutation-negative controls. Changes in responsiveness to pain were scored as absent (0), questionable or very mild (0.5), mild (1), moderate (2) or severe (3). Mutation carriers were classified into C9orf72 (104), GRN (128) and MAPT (49) groups, and into presymptomatic and symptomatic stages. An ordinal logistic regression model was used to compare groups, adjusting for age and sex. Voxel-based morphometry was performed to identify neuroanatomical correlates of abnormal pain perception. Results Altered responsiveness to pain was present to a significantly greater extent in symptomatic C9orf72 expansion carriers than in controls: mean score 0.40 (SD 0.71) vs 0.00 (0.04), reported in 29% vs 1%. No significant differences were seen between the other symptomatic groups and controls, or any of the presymptomatic mutation carriers and controls. Neural correlates of altered pain perception in C9orf72 expansion carriers were the bilateral thalamus and striatum as well as a predominantly right-sided network of regions involving the orbitofrontal cortex, inferomedial temporal lobe and cerebellum. Conclusion Changes in pain perception are a feature of C9orf72 expansion carriers, likely representing a disruption in somatosensory, homeostatic and semantic processing, underpinned by atrophy in a thalamo-cortico-striatal network.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The key role of the salience network and subcortical regions in the pathophysiology of bvFTD was highlighted and associated dysfunction of emotional processing, interoception, reward processing, higher‐order cognitive functions, and olfactory and gustatory perceptions was suggested.
Abstract: Numerous studies have reported brain alterations in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). However, they pointed to inconsistent findings.

9 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An automated labeling system for subdividing the human cerebral cortex into standard gyral-based neuroanatomical regions is both anatomically valid and reliable and may be useful for both morphometric and functional studies of the cerebral cortex.

9,940 citations


"Pain and temperature processing in ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...1 (Desikan et al., 2006; Jenkinson et al., 2012) to fit the group mean template brain image....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: DARTEL has been applied to intersubject registration of 471 whole brain images, and the resulting deformations were evaluated in terms of how well they encode the shape information necessary to separate male and female subjects and to predict the ages of the subjects.

6,999 citations


"Pain and temperature processing in ..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...Preprocessing of patients’ brain magnetic resonance images for VBM was performed using New Segment (Ashburner and Friston, 2005) and the DARTEL (Ashburner, 2007) toolbox of SPM8 (www....

    [...]

  • ...A study-specific group mean template brain image was created by warping all native space whole-brain images to the final DARTEL template and calculating the average of the warped brain images....

    [...]

  • ...Preprocessing of patients’ brain magnetic resonance images for VBM was performed using New Segment (Ashburner and Friston, 2005) and the DARTEL (Ashburner, 2007) toolbox of SPM8 (www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm) running under Matlab7....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two distinct networks typically coactivated during functional MRI tasks are identified, anchored by dorsal anterior cingulate and orbital frontoinsular cortices with robust connectivity to subcortical and limbic structures, and an “executive-control network” that links dorsolateral frontal and parietal neocortices.
Abstract: Variations in neural circuitry, inherited or acquired, may underlie important individual differences in thought, feeling, and action patterns. Here, we used task-free connectivity analyses to isolate and characterize two distinct networks typically coactivated during functional MRI tasks. We identified a "salience network," anchored by dorsal anterior cingulate (dACC) and orbital frontoinsular cortices with robust connectivity to subcortical and limbic structures, and an "executive-control network" that links dorsolateral frontal and parietal neocortices. These intrinsic connectivity networks showed dissociable correlations with functions measured outside the scanner. Prescan anxiety ratings correlated with intrinsic functional connectivity of the dACC node of the salience network, but with no region in the executive-control network, whereas executive task performance correlated with lateral parietal nodes of the executive-control network, but with no region in the salience network. Our findings suggest that task-free analysis of intrinsic connectivity networks may help elucidate the neural architectures that support fundamental aspects of human behavior.

6,049 citations


"Pain and temperature processing in ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...More anterior insular regions are also targeted in PNFA, providing a candidate locus for altered homeostatic awareness in this syndrome (Seeley et al., 2009)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New findings suggest a fundamental role for the AIC (and the von Economo neurons it contains) in awareness, and thus it needs to be considered as a potential neural correlate of consciousness.
Abstract: The anterior insular cortex (AIC) is implicated in a wide range of conditions and behaviours, from bowel distension and orgasm, to cigarette craving and maternal love, to decision making and sudden insight. Its function in the re-representation of interoception offers one possible basis for its involvement in all subjective feelings. New findings suggest a fundamental role for the AIC (and the von Economo neurons it contains) in awareness, and thus it needs to be considered as a potential neural correlate of consciousness.

5,279 citations


"Pain and temperature processing in ..." refers background or methods or result in this paper

  • ...Such noisy processing might involve degraded temporal scheduling of salient sensory and emotional signals, a key function attributed to anterior insula that is vulnerable in FTLD (Wiener and Coslett, 2008; Craig, 2009; Henley et al., 2014)....

    [...]

  • ...Together these networks have a core role in regulation of bodily homeostasis: current neurobiological formulations emphasize convergent processing of somatic and visceral pain and thermoregulatory signals as functionally interdependent aspects of interoception (Craig, 2002, 2009)....

    [...]

  • ...…labelled lines have been incorporated by current models that emphasize the intimate association of pain and thermal information and their integration as joint aspects of interoception, salient sensory phenomena that are potentially critical for signalling body homeostasis (Craig, 2002, 2009)....

    [...]

  • ...…neural networks that are engaged jointly by these diverse phenomena and reaffirms the primacy of the thalamo-insular linkage in regulating the interface between homeostatic and environmental contingencies, reward and punishment (Craig, 2002, 2009; Perry et al., 2014; Zhou and Seeley, 2014)....

    [...]

  • ...This region may be involved in generating subjective psychological states via projections to anterior insula, anterior cingulate, orbitofrontal and prefrontal cortices and in programming coherent autonomic effector responses (Craig, 2002, 2009; Grecucci et al., 2013; Zhou and Seeley, 2014)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Functional anatomical work has detailed an afferent neural system in primates and in humans that represents all aspects of the physiological condition of the physical body that might provide a foundation for subjective feelings, emotion and self-awareness.
Abstract: As humans, we perceive feelings from our bodies that relate our state of well-being, our energy and stress levels, our mood and disposition. How do we have these feelings? What neural processes do they represent? Recent functional anatomical work has detailed an afferent neural system in primates and in humans that represents all aspects of the physiological condition of the physical body. This system constitutes a representation of 'the material me', and might provide a foundation for subjective feelings, emotion and self-awareness.

4,673 citations


"Pain and temperature processing in ..." refers background or methods or result in this paper

  • ...The present evidence suggests a model for synthesizing neurodegenerative disease effects on these cortical operations that is consistent both with data from normal neurophysiological and functional neuroimaging work and the effects of focal brain lesions (Craig, 2002, 2009; Borsook, 2012)....

    [...]

  • ...…interpretation, as under most circumstances thermal comfort or distress reflects the degree of perceived mismatch between one’s own body temperature and the environment; temperature sensibility might therefore be regarded as a probe of interoceptive signal processing par excellence (Craig, 2002)....

    [...]

  • ...Peripheral somatic and visceral sensory afferents conveying pain and thermal information relay via postero-lateral thalamic nuclei to somatosensory cortex (Brodmann area 3a) and dorsal posterior insula (Craig, 2002)....

    [...]

  • ...Temperature sensibility is mediated by a closely overlapping network (Craig, 2002; Moulton et al., 2012)....

    [...]

  • ...Together these networks have a core role in regulation of bodily homeostasis: current neurobiological formulations emphasize convergent processing of somatic and visceral pain and thermoregulatory signals as functionally interdependent aspects of interoception (Craig, 2002, 2009)....

    [...]

Related Papers (5)