Affiliation:
1. The Department of Neurology, St Vincent’s University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
2. The Department of Psychology, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
3. The School of Medicine & Health Science, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
Abstract
Background:
Individuals with idiopathic adult-onset isolated cervical dystonia (CD) may have cognitive difficulties and increased mood challenges. Social cognition and executive functioning may be particularly affected.
Objective:
To explore social cognition and executive functioning performance in individuals with CD, using the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB), as previous research has used traditional, nondigital neuropsychological assessments. We sought to investigate the relationships between social cognition, executive functioning, mood, and disability in individuals with CD.
Methods:
We recruited 37 individuals with CD, including 26 women with an age range of 33 to 69 years (M = 56.64, SD = 8.31) from a dystonia clinic in a hospital neurology department. The individuals completed selected tasks from the CANTAB measuring social cognition and executive functioning. We compared the individuals’ performance with CANTAB normative data. Depression, anxiety, disease severity, and disability were measured.
Results:
The individuals with CD had significantly lower scores than the CANTAB normative data in both social cognition and executive functioning tasks, with the largest differences evident in problem-solving, attention, and positive emotion bias tasks. Poorer emotion recognition was associated with increased difficulties in problem-solving tasks. The individuals demonstrated a bias toward identifying happiness in facial affect, which was related to a poorer recognition of emotions. Cognitive performance was not related to CD severity or disability or to current mood symptoms.
Conclusion:
Difficulties with both social cognition and executive functioning were identified in the individuals with CD, and are likely important targets for clinical interventions.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)