Abrahams S, Goldstein L H, Simmons A, Brammer M, Williams S C R, Giampietro V, Leigh P N
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK.
Brain. 2004 Jul;127(Pt 7):1507-17. doi: 10.1093/brain/awh170. Epub 2004 May 26.
The cognitive impairment revealed in some non- demented amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients is characterized by executive dysfunction with widely repeated deficits on tests of verbal (letter) fluency. However, conflicting evidence exists of an impairment on other word retrieval tasks, such as confrontation naming, which do not place heavy demands on executive processes. Previous research has demonstrated intact confrontation naming in the presence of verbal fluency deficits, although naming deficits have been described in other studies. In this investigation, functional MRI (fMRI) techniques were employed to explore whether word retrieval deficits and underlying cerebral abnormalities were specific to letter fluency, which are more likely to indicate executive dysfunction, or were also present in confrontation naming, indicating language dysfunction. Twenty-eight non-demented ALS patients were compared with 18 healthy controls. The two groups were matched for age, intelligence quotient, years of education, and anxiety and depression scores. Two compressed-sequence overt fMRI activation paradigms were employed, letter fluency and confrontation naming, which were developed for use with an older and potentially impaired population. In ALS patients relative to controls, the letter fluency fMRI task revealed significantly impaired activation in the middle and inferior frontal gyri and anterior cingulate gyrus, in addition to regions of the parietal and temporal lobes. The confrontation naming fMRI task also revealed impaired activation in less extensive prefrontal regions, including the inferior frontal gyrus and regions of the temporal, parietal and occipital lobes. These changes were present despite matched performance between patients and controls during each activation paradigm. The pattern of dysfunction corresponded to the presence of cognitive deficits on both letter fluency and confrontation naming in the ALS group. This study provides evidence of cerebral abnormalities in ALS in the network of regions involved in language and executive functions. Moreover, the findings further illustrate the heterogeneity of cognitive and cerebral change in ALS.
一些非痴呆型肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)患者所表现出的认知障碍,其特征为执行功能障碍,在言语(字母)流畅性测试中存在广泛且反复出现的缺陷。然而,对于其他词汇提取任务(如对物体命名)是否存在损伤,存在相互矛盾的证据,这些任务对执行过程的要求并不高。先前的研究表明,在存在言语流畅性缺陷的情况下,对物体命名功能完好,尽管在其他研究中也曾描述过命名缺陷。在本研究中,采用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)技术来探究词汇提取缺陷及潜在的脑部异常是特定于字母流畅性(更可能表明执行功能障碍),还是也存在于对物体命名中(表明语言功能障碍)。将28名非痴呆型ALS患者与18名健康对照者进行比较。两组在年龄、智商、受教育年限以及焦虑和抑郁评分方面相匹配。采用了两种压缩序列显性fMRI激活范式,即字母流畅性和对物体命名,这两种范式是为老年及可能存在功能受损的人群设计的。相对于对照组,ALS患者在字母流畅性fMRI任务中,除了顶叶和颞叶区域外,额中回、额下回及前扣带回的激活明显受损。对物体命名fMRI任务也显示,在较小范围的前额叶区域(包括额下回以及颞叶、顶叶和枕叶区域)激活受损。尽管在每个激活范式中患者和对照者的表现相匹配,但这些变化依然存在。功能障碍模式与ALS组在字母流畅性和对物体命名方面的认知缺陷情况相符。本研究为ALS患者在语言和执行功能相关脑区网络中存在脑部异常提供了证据。此外,研究结果进一步说明了ALS患者认知和脑部变化的异质性。