Impaired sequence manipulation in non‐demented patients with progressive supranuclear palsy

Author:

Zhang Guanyu1ORCID,Ma Jinghong2,Chan Piu3,Ye Zheng4

Affiliation:

1. China Institute of Sport Science Beijing China

2. Department of Neurology Xuanwu Hospital of Capital Medical University Beijing China

3. Department of Neurobiology, Neurology and Geriatrics, Xuanwu Hospital of Capital Medical University Beijing Institute of Geriatrics Beijing China

4. Institute of Neuroscience, Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology Chinese Academy of Sciences Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractPurposeSequential working memory is the ability to maintain and manipulate sequential information at a second time scale. Patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) or Parkinson's disease (PD) perform poorly in tests that require the flexible arrangement of thoughts or actions. This study investigated whether sequential working memory is differently impaired in patients with PSP versus PD.MethodTwenty‐nine patients with PSP Richardson's syndrome (PSP‐RS), 36 patients with PD, and 36 healthy controls (HC) completed 3 well‐established neuropsychological tests, including digit span forward (DST‐F), digit span backward (DST‐B), and adaptive digit ordering tests (DOT‐A). The DST‐F required maintaining digit sequences, and the DST‐B and DOT‐A required maintaining and manipulating digit sequences.FindingThe PSP‐RS group scored lower than the PD and HC groups in the DST‐B and DOT‐A but not in the DST‐F, indicating that the ability to manipulate sequences was impaired, but the maintenance ability was preserved in PSP‐RS patients. Moreover, in PSP‐RS, the DST‐B score negatively correlated with the severity of motor symptoms. The actual levodopa dose positively correlated with the DST‐B ordering cost (DST‐F score vs. DST‐B score). The PSP patients who took a greater dose of levodopa tended to have higher DST‐B ordering cost. There was no effect of levodopa on DST‐B or DOT‐A in PD.ConclusionThese results suggested that the ability to manipulate sequence was already reduced in patients with PSP‐RS and was worse than in patients with PD.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Wiley

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