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PALLIDAL FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY CHANGES ARE ASSOCIATED WITH DISGUST RECOGNITION IN PURE MOTOR AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS
Abstract
Aims
In pure-motor ALS patients, we recently observed that smaller volume of the left pallidum was related with impaired recognition of disgust. In the present study, we investigated the resting-state functional connectivity (RS-FC) of the pallidum in ALS, and the relationship between RS-FC changes and disgust recognition.
Methods
19 pure-motor ALS patients and 52 matched healthy controls underwent RS functional MRI and a neuropsychological assessment including the Comprehensive Affect Testing System (CATS), investigating emotion recognition. A seed-based RS-FC analysis was run between the left and right pallidum and the rest of the brain, and compared between groups. Correlation analyses were assessed between the RS-FC significant changes and patients’ performance in recognizing disgust.
Results
Compared to controls, ALS presented reduced RS-FC between bilateral pallidum and right superior and middle frontal gyri, and increased RS-FC between bilateral pallidum and left superior temporal and postcentral gyri, and left Rolandic operculum. Increased RS-FC was observed between left pallidum and left supramarginal gyrus and between right pallidum and contralateral insula and thalamus. In patients, lower performance in recognizing disgust was related with reduced RS-FC between bilateral pallidum and right middle and superior frontal gyri, and with increased RS-FC between bilateral pallidum and left postcentral gyrus and Rolandic operculum.
Conclusions
Conclusions. In cognitively unimpaired ALS patients, reduced pallidum-frontal RS-FC and increased pallidum-insular-thalamic RS-FC suggest a fronto-striatal functional disconnection, which may contribute to deficits of patients in recognizing disgust.
Funding: Italian Ministry of Health (GR-2013-02357415); European Research Council (StG-2016_714388_NeuroTRACK).