School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Brain and Mind Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Eur J Neurosci. 2022 Nov;56(9):5601-5614. doi: 10.1111/ejn.15557. Epub 2021 Dec 23.
Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a neurodegenerative clinical syndrome characterised by a progressive decline in speech and language functions. Deficits in behaviour, mood and functional capacity are reported in PPA but are less well understood. This study examined the PPA variants' profiles on these domains at initial presentation and over time and evaluated their relations to overall cognitive ability. Behaviour, mood and functional capacity were measured annually (over ~6 years) in 145 individuals diagnosed with PPA (41 logopenic [lv-PPA], 44 non-fluent [nfv-PPA] and 60 semantic variants [sv-PPA]) using the Cambridge Behavioural Inventory-Revised (CBI-R) carer questionnaire. Overall cognition was assessed annually with the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-III. Distinct profiles were observed across PPA syndromes. Notably, sv-PPA carers reported greater behavioural, eating and motivational disturbances than the other PPA variants throughout the disease course. Reported memory problems were also greater in sv-PPA and lv-PPA than in nfv-PPA across all time points. These disturbances occurred in the context of the sv-PPA group demonstrating a slower rate of cognitive decline than the lv-PPA group and a parallel rate to that found in the nfv-PPA group. Associations between overall cognition and the CBI-R domains were trivial at baseline assessment; however, distinct profiles emerged when mapping each syndrome's overall cognitive decline with their behavioural, mood and functional trajectories. Our findings demonstrate that the evolving behaviour, mood and functional capacity profiles of the PPA variants are distinct and extend beyond the primary disorder of language. These findings have important implications for clinical management and caregiver education in PPA.
原发性进行性失语症 (PPA) 是一种神经退行性临床综合征,其特征是言语和语言功能逐渐下降。PPA 患者报告存在行为、情绪和功能能力方面的缺陷,但了解较少。本研究在初始表现和随访期间检查了 PPA 变异体在这些领域的特征,并评估了它们与整体认知能力的关系。145 名 PPA 患者(41 名语言流畅性下降型[lv-PPA]、44 名非流畅性下降型[nfv-PPA]和 60 名语义性变体型[sv-PPA])每年使用剑桥行为量表修订版(CBI-R)家属问卷评估行为、情绪和功能能力。每年使用 Addenbrooke's 认知测验-III 评估整体认知能力。在 PPA 综合征中观察到不同的特征。值得注意的是,在整个疾病过程中,sv-PPA 患者的家属报告的行为、饮食和动机障碍比其他 PPA 变体更为严重。sv-PPA 和 lv-PPA 在所有时间点的记忆问题也比 nfv-PPA 更为严重。这些障碍发生在 sv-PPA 组的认知衰退速度比 lv-PPA 组慢,与 nfv-PPA 组相当的背景下。在基线评估时,整体认知与 CBI-R 各领域之间的相关性微不足道;然而,当将每个综合征的整体认知下降与他们的行为、情绪和功能轨迹映射时,就会出现不同的特征。我们的发现表明,PPA 变异体的不断发展的行为、情绪和功能能力特征是不同的,并且超出了语言的主要障碍。这些发现对 PPA 的临床管理和护理人员教育具有重要意义。