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1.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39308147

RÉSUMÉ

The human face plays a central role in emotions and social communication. The emotional and somatic motor networks generate facial behaviors, but whether facial behaviors have representations in the structural anatomy of the human brain is unknown. We coded 16 facial behaviors in 55 healthy older adults who viewed five videos that elicited emotions and examined whether individual differences in facial behavior related to regional variation in gray matter volume. Voxel-based morphometry analyses revealed that greater emotional facial behavior during the disgust trial (i.e., greater brow furrowing and eye tightening as well as nose wrinkling and upper lip raising) and the amusement trial (i.e., greater smiling and eye tightening) was associated with larger gray matter volume in midcingulate cortex, supplementary motor area, and precentral gyrus, areas spanning both the emotional and somatic motor networks. When measured across trials, however, these facial behaviors (and others) only related to gray matter volume in the precentral gyrus, a somatic motor network hub. These findings suggest that the emotional and somatic motor networks store structural representations of facial behavior, and that the midcingulate cortex is critical for generating the predictable movements in the face that arise during emotions.

2.
Neuroimage Clin ; 43: 103649, 2024.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39098187

RÉSUMÉ

Diminished basal parasympathetic nervous system activity is a feature of frontotemporal dementia that relates to left frontoinsula dysfunction and empathy impairment. Individuals with a pathogenic expansion of the hexanucleotide repeat in chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 (C9orf72), the most common genetic cause of frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, provide a unique opportunity to examine whether parasympathetic activity is disrupted in genetic forms of frontotemporal dementia and to investigate when parasympathetic deficits manifest in the pathophysiological cascade. We measured baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia, a parasympathetic measure of heart rate variability, over two minutes in a sample of 102 participants that included 19 asymptomatic expansion carriers (C9+ asymp), 14 expansion carriers with mild cognitive impairment (C9+ MCI), 16 symptomatic expansion carriers with frontotemporal dementia (C9+ FTD), and 53 expansion-negative healthy controls (C9- HC) who also underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging. In follow-up analyses, we compared baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia in the C9+ FTD group with an independent age-, sex-, and clinical severity-matched group of 26 people with sporadic behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. The Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration-modified Clinical Dementia Rating-Sum of Boxes score was used to quantify behavioral symptom severity, and informant ratings on the Interpersonal Reactivity Index provided measures of participants' current emotional (empathic concern) and cognitive (perspective-taking) empathy. Results indicated that the C9+ FTD group had lower baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia than the C9+ MCI, C9+ asymp, and C9- HC groups, a deficit that was comparable to that of sporadic behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. Linear regression analyses indicated that lower baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia was associated with worse behavioral symptom severity and lower empathic concern and perspective-taking across the C9orf72 expansion carrier clinical spectrum. Whole-brain voxel-based morphometry analyses in participants with C9orf72 pathogenic expansions found that lower baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia correlated with smaller gray matter volume in the left frontoinsula and bilateral thalamus, key structures that support parasympathetic function, and in the bilateral parietal lobes, occipital lobes, and cerebellum, regions that are also vulnerable in individuals with C9orf72 expansions. This study provides novel evidence that basal parasympathetic functioning is diminished in FTD due to C9orf72 expansions and suggests that baseline respiratory sinus arrhythmia may be a potential non-invasive biomarker that is sensitive to behavioral symptoms in the early stages of disease.


Sujet(s)
Protéine C9orf72 , Dysfonctionnement cognitif , Expansion de séquence répétée de l'ADN , Empathie , Démence frontotemporale , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Système nerveux parasympathique , Thalamus , Humains , Femelle , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Protéine C9orf72/génétique , Sujet âgé , Empathie/physiologie , Démence frontotemporale/génétique , Démence frontotemporale/physiopathologie , Démence frontotemporale/anatomopathologie , Démence frontotemporale/imagerie diagnostique , Expansion de séquence répétée de l'ADN/génétique , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Système nerveux parasympathique/physiopathologie , Thalamus/imagerie diagnostique , Thalamus/physiopathologie , Thalamus/anatomopathologie , Dysfonctionnement cognitif/physiopathologie , Dysfonctionnement cognitif/génétique , Dysfonctionnement cognitif/imagerie diagnostique , Dysfonctionnement cognitif/étiologie , Dysfonctionnement cognitif/anatomopathologie , Hétérozygote , Arythmie sinusale respiratoire/physiologie , Cortex cérébral/imagerie diagnostique , Cortex cérébral/physiopathologie , Cortex cérébral/anatomopathologie
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