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Emotional, social and cognitive functioning in neurodegenerative disorders

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Why should neuropsychologists be interested in emotional functions? ... Structural changes in inferior temporal gyrus associated with poor emotion recognition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emotional, social and cognitive functioning in neurodegenerative disorders


1
Emotional, social and cognitive functioning in
neurodegenerative disorders
  • Dr Louise Phillips,
  • School of Psychology,
  • College of Life Sciences and Medicine,
  • Aberdeen University.
  • louise.phillips_at_abdn.ac.uk

2
Outline
  • What is emotional functioning?
  • Why should neuropsychologists be interested in
    emotional functions?
  • What are the effects of dementia on emotion
    processing ?
  • Focus Alzheimers Disease and emotion perception
  • What are the effects of other degenerative
    conditions on emotional functioning?

3
Emotional functioning
  • Monitoring and regulating mood
  • Decoding others emotions

4
Emotional functioning
Understanding own emotions
5
Emotional functioning in neuropsychology
  • Brain injury/disease can impair emotional
    functioning
  • Direct effects of brain illness on social and
    emotional processing.
  • Indirect effects as a consequence of
  • Emotional response to illness
  • Changes in social participation
  • Impaired cognitive functioning

6
Cognitive neuropsychology
  • Neuropsychology traditionally deals with
    cognition and perception.
  • Emotions and social behaviour seen as outside the
    realm of neuropsychology
  • E.g. Lezak Neuropsychological Assessment.
  • 19 chapters on cognitive neuropsychology
  • 1 chapter on Tests of personal adjustment and
    emotional functioning.
  • Section on projective personality tests
  • Section on depression, personality and QOL
    questionnaires BDI, MMPI

7
Why are emotions important?
  • Contrary to the past 40 years of cognitive
    psychology PEOPLE ARE NOT COMPUTERS!
  • Humans are very social creatures and
    understanding emotions is essential in
    interaction.
  • Regulating and decoding emotions important in
  • Social relationship maintenance
  • Rehabilitation success
  • Social participation

8
Dementia and emotions
9
Dementia and behavioural problems
  • Memory problems usually seen as key symptom in
    dementia.
  • But lots of clinical and anecdotal evidence of
    behavioural problems
  • Control of attention and behaviour
  • Inappropriate social behaviour
  • Mood disorder, poor control of emotions

10
Cognition in Alzheimers Disease (AD)
  • Memory impairment
  • Episodic memory failures
  • Problems with new learning
  • Impaired working memory
  • Language impairment
  • Naming difficulties
  • Content-poor conversation
  • Poor control of attention and cognition
  • Executive function
  • Inhibition and updating

11
Social aspects of AD
  • Social behaviours
  • Interaction with other people
  • Problems e.g. aggressive, withdrawn
  • Communication
  • Impact of language changes
  • Importance of emotional cues and other nonverbal
    indicators in social interaction
  • Quality of life
  • Is QOL in person with dementia and caregivers
    influenced by emotion changes in AD?

12
AD and experience and expression of emotions
  • Co-occurrence of AD and mood disorders
  • Incidence of depression up to 50
  • Diagnosis issues
  • Regulation of emotions poorer?
  • Labile or flat affect
  • Mood regulation irritability and aggression
  • 20 of AD patients rated by carers
  • Loss in ability to express emotions or affection.
  • Occurs early in disease process.

13
Why study emotions in dementia?
  • For hospital staff and relatives
  • Emotional and behavioural problems can
    particularly disruptive and distressing
  • Implications for QoL of patients and carers.
  • Little known about emotional problems in AD
  • Assessment issues
  • Emotional issues not considered in interventions
    e.g. drug trials

14
Emotion perception in Alzheimer's Disease (AD)
  • Funded by the Alzheimers Research Trust.
  • Collaborators
  • Donald Mowat, Stephen Bell, Clare Scott.

15
Emotion perception
  • Ability to perceive facial expressions of emotion
    critical in social communication.
  • Standardised stimuli available.
  • Widely used in cross-cultural and
    neuropsychological studies.

Choose from emotion labels happiness
sadness anger disgust surprise fear
16
The brain emotional processing
  • Brain areas involved in experiencing and
    perceiving emotions
  • Limbic structures amygdala, medial temporal lobe
  • Frontal regions orbitofrontal, ventromedial
  • Cingulate cortex
  • Basal ganglia and insula
  • Different brain regions involved in different
    emotions?

17
AD and neuroanatomical changes
  • Build up of neurofibrillary tangles
  • Considerable individual differences
  • Can be widespread
  • Initial changes most commonly
  • Medial temporal lobes, hippocampus
  • Spreads to neocortex e.g. frontal lobes

18
AD and emotion perception
  • Patients with AD poorer at interpreting facial
    expressions of emotion
  • Especially sadness
  • AD results in poorer ability to interpret
    emotions from videoclips of moving faces
  • AD patients impaired in interpreting prosody from
    speech

19
Rosen et al. (2005)
  • 50 patients with dementia
  • Impaired on emotion perception
  • Structural changes in inferior temporal gyrus
    associated with poor emotion recognition

20
AD, emotion perception and interpersonal behaviour
  • Shimokawa et al. (2001)
  • Assessed emotion perception and problem
    behaviours in AD
  • Difficulties in relationships and patient
    management
  • Measure of emotion perception predictive
  • Cognitive measures not predictive

21
Aims of current study
  • 1. To identify the pattern of emotion perception
    deficits seen in patients with AD.
  • 2. To investigate the link between emotion
    processing and cognitive problems in AD
  • 3. To investigate the effects of emotional
    problems in AD patients on their QOL.

22
Sample
23
Emotion labelling task accuracy
happiness sadness anger disgust surprise
fear
24
Emotion discrimination task
  SAME  or  DIFFERENT emotion?
25
Effects of AD on emotion perception
  • Impaired emotion labelling (?2 .31)
  • Problems identifying sadness, anger, fear,
    surprise
  • Particularly likely to choose fear label
  • Impaired emotion discrimination (?2 .19)
  • Tend to more often say different than same
  • Particularly likely to say two sad faces express
    different emotions.

26
Are the effects of AD on emotion perception
linked to cognitive changes?
  • MMSE
  • Executive function tasks
  • Letter and semantic fluency
  • Stroop inhibition cost
  • Face identity perception
  • Benton Facial Recognition Test

27
Are the effects of AD on emotion perception
linked to cognitive changes?
  • AD effects on emotion labelling and emotion
    discrimination
  • Overlap in variance with executive function but
    not facial identity perception.
  • Group differences in emotion perception
  • Not attributable to problems in face perception
  • But executive function important.
  • In AD group
  • MMSE score does not correlate with emotion
    perception performance

28
Relationship MMSE and emotion perception in AD
29
QoL-AD
30
Relationship emotion perception and QoL in AD
31
Relationship MMSE and QoL in AD
32
Conclusions AD and emotion perception
  • AD has severe impact on interpreting facial
    expressions of emotion
  • All negative emotions except disgust
  • Linked to executive dysfunction in AD
  • Rather than general severity of cognitive change
  • Not attributable to changes in perceptual aspects
    of face processing?
  • Implications for quality of life in AD

33
Effects of other types of degenerative condition
on emotional functioning
34
CerebroVascular Dementia (CVD)
  • Second most common form of dementia
  • Heterogeneous pathology
  • Multiple infarcts cortical and subcortical
  • Co-occurs with AD
  • Patients with CVD perform worse on emotion
    recognition tasks than those with AD despite
    similar cognitive performance
  • Anxiety and depression more prevalent in CVD than
    AD patients

35
Fronto-Temporal Dementia (FTD)
  • Neuronal damage localised.
  • Semantic dementia involves fluent aphasia and
    mainly temporal lobe atrophy
  • Frontal variant (fvFTD) involves behaviour
    problems and particularly ventromedial frontal
    atrophy
  • fvFTD Social and emotional disorders.
  • Disinhibition, inappropriate social conduct, flat
    affect, loss of embarrassment, personality
    change, marriage breakdown, lack of empathy.
  • Relatively intact cognitive performance

36
fvFTD and emotion perception
  • Patients have poor ability to interpret facial
    and vocal expressions of emotion
  • Not selective to particular emotions
  • Not caused by general perceptual deficits
  • May underlie behavioural problems
  • Not generally impaired on face processing
  • Greater impairment on emotion processing compared
    to AD

37
Huntingtons disease
  • Problems in recognising emotions
  • In faces and voices
  • Especially disgust, sometimes anger
  • Impairment in disgust recognition linked to
    changes in insula
  • Mood disorders
  • Problems with anger regulation irritation
  • Depression common, particularly in early stages
  • Apathy

38
Parkinsons disease
  • Depression in around 50 patients
  • Significant cause of functional impairment
  • Caused by neural changes?
  • Mood fluctuations common
  • Poor recognition of facial expressions
  • Specifically disgust linked to insula?
  • Problems with emotion display
  • Bowers et al. (2006) show less expression
  • Due to impaired motor control

39
Multiple Sclerosis
  • Demyelination of neurons
  • Affects white matter
  • Disrupt cortical-subcortical networks
  • Location hugely variable
  • Emotional changes
  • Depression highly prevalent
  • Impaired ability to decode emotional prosody and
    facial expressions (Beatty et al., 2003)

40
Conclusions
41
Dementia and emotion processing
  • Problems with emotion perception and mood control
    prevalent in degenerative conditions
  • Emotional processing may be separate from memory
    and other cognitive disorders
  • Deficits more pronounced in other types of
    dementia (e.g. FTD) compared to AD
  • Specific degenerative conditions may impair
    experience and perception of particular emotions.

42
Implications
  • Patients with degenerative conditions may have
    difficulties interpreting negative emotions in
    others
  • Implications for social interaction
  • Poorer control and understanding of emotions
    impairs social interaction
  • Problem behaviours
  • Distressing for those involved in care
  • Impairs quality of life of patients
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