Recognition and perception of emotions in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

Author:

Rainer Lucas Johannes123ORCID,Kuchukhidze Giorgi12ORCID,Trinka Eugen1245ORCID,Braun Mario6,Kronbichler Martin26,Langthaler Patrick17,Zimmermann Georg89ORCID,Kronbichler Lisa23,Said‐Yürekli Sarah16,Kirschner Margarita1,Zamarian Laura10,Schmid Elisabeth3,Jokeit Hennric11,Höfler Julia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Christian Doppler University Hospital, Paracelsus Medical University, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Salzburg, member of the European Reference Network EpiCARE Salzburg Austria

2. Neuroscience Institute Christian Doppler University Hospital, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Salzburg Austria

3. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Christian Doppler University Hospital, Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg Austria

4. Department of Public Health, Health Services Research and Health Technology Assessment University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics, and Technology Hall in Tirol Austria

5. Karl‐Landsteiner Institute for Neurorehabilitation and Space Neurology Salzburg Austria

6. Center for Cognitive Neuroscience/Department of Psychology, Faculty of Natural Sciences Paris Lodron University Salzburg Austria

7. Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Natural Sciences Paris Lodron University Salzburg Austria

8. Team Biostatistics and Big Medical Data, Lab for Intelligent Data Analytics Salzburg Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg Austria

9. Research and Innovation Management Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg Austria

10. Department of Neurology Medical University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

11. Swiss Epilepsy Center Zurich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractObjectivePerception and recognition of emotions are fundamental prerequisites of human life. Patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) may have emotional and behavioral impairments that might influence socially desirable interactions. We aimed to investigate perception and recognition of emotions in patients with JME by means of neuropsychological tests and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).MethodsSixty‐five patients with JME (median age = 27 years, interquartile range [IQR] = 23–34) were prospectively recruited at the Department of Neurology, Christian Doppler University Hospital, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria. Patients were compared to 68 healthy controls (median age = 24 years, IQR = 21–31), matched for sex, age, and education. All study participants underwent the Networks of Emotion Processing test battery (NEmo), an fMRI paradigm of “dynamic fearful faces,” a structured interview for psychiatric and personality disorders, and comprehensive neuropsychological testing.ResultsJME patients versus healthy controls demonstrated significant deficits in emotion recognition in facial and verbal tasks of all emotions, especially fear. fMRI revealed decreased amygdala activation in JME patients as compared to healthy controls. Patients were at a higher risk of experiencing psychiatric disorders as compared to healthy controls. Cognitive evaluation revealed impaired attentional and executive functioning, namely psychomotor speed, tonic alertness, divided attention, mental flexibility, and inhibition of automated reactions. Duration of epilepsy correlated negatively with parallel prosodic and facial emotion recognition in NEmo. Deficits in emotion recognition were not associated with psychiatric comorbidities, impaired attention and executive functions, types of seizures, and treatment.SignificanceThis prospective study demonstrated that as compared to healthy subjects, patients with JME had significant deficits in recognition and perception of emotions as shown by neuropsychological tests and fMRI. The results of this study may have importance for psychological/psychotherapeutic interventions in the management of patients with JME.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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