2019
DOI: 10.1002/mds.27787
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Insensitivity to loss predicts apathy in huntington's disease

Abstract: Background Apathy is a deficit in goal‐directed behavior that significantly affects quality of life and function. It is common in Huntington's disease and other disorders affecting corticostriatal pathways. Deficits in processing of reward, altered effort, and executive dysfunction are associated with apathy in other disorders, but the cognitive processes leading to apathy in Huntington's disease remain largely unknown. A previously reported deficit in learning from losses in Huntington's disease raises the po… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
(159 reference statements)
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“…As we have previously reported, 64 mean reaction time (Fig. 2A, B and C, and Supplementary Tables 7-10) was faster for higher reward value trials in the whole group (estimate = −0.0027, P = 3.63 × 10 − 5), whilst Huntington's disease cases had slower reaction times than controls (best model included case status: weight = 0.62, estimate = 0.22, P = 0.032), even when corrected for TMS, which was also strongly associated with slower reaction times (P = 4.98 × 10 −5 ) (Fig.…”
Section: Reward Reaction Time Task: Motivational Anhedoniasupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…As we have previously reported, 64 mean reaction time (Fig. 2A, B and C, and Supplementary Tables 7-10) was faster for higher reward value trials in the whole group (estimate = −0.0027, P = 3.63 × 10 − 5), whilst Huntington's disease cases had slower reaction times than controls (best model included case status: weight = 0.62, estimate = 0.22, P = 0.032), even when corrected for TMS, which was also strongly associated with slower reaction times (P = 4.98 × 10 −5 ) (Fig.…”
Section: Reward Reaction Time Task: Motivational Anhedoniasupporting
confidence: 77%
“…We recruited 51 Huntington's disease participants from the South Wales Huntington's disease service as part of a wider study of neuropsychiatric symptoms in Huntington's disease 64,89 (disease stage: pre-symptomatic to Stage IV), and 26 controls were recruited both from family members not at risk of Huntington's disease, and university staff and students through local advertising. We excluded participants under the age of 18, Huntington's disease participants without a confirmatory gene test, pregnant women, and any participant with brain injury or brain disorder other than Huntington's disease.…”
Section: Participant Recruitment and Consentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First, although the verbal fluency task that we used as a measure of cognitive decline does have extensive evidence of dysfunction in HD ( Ho et al, 2002 ; Stout et al, 2011 ; Landwehrmeyer et al, 2016 ), showing differences from controls and longitudinal progression in premanifest and motor manifest participants, the symbol digit modality task and Stroop task show impairments earlier in the disease course and may be more sensitive to change in HD ( Stout et al, 2011 , 2014 ). Secondly, this study is part of a wider research project into the cognitive basis of neuropsychiatric dysfunction in HD ( McLauchlan, 2018 ; McLauchlan et al, 2019 ) and a total of 14 tasks were completed. Although we randomised task order for each participant, completing these tasks as part of the entire battery may have artificially accentuated irritability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants completed a phonemic verbal fluency task as a measure of cognitive impairment–a standard assessment of cognition in HD ( Landwehrmeyer et al, 2016 ). This study was part of a wider research project into the cognitive basis of psychopathology in HD ( McLauchlan, 2018 ), the total battery of 14 tasks also included tasks measuring motivation, learning, estimation and other cognitive processes hypothesised to contribute to apathy ( McLauchlan et al, 2019 ) and depression ( McLauchlan et al, 2022 ), although there is no overlap with the tasks and questionnaires presented in this work. The battery was administered in random order.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%