Lost in space(s): Multimodal neuroimaging of disorientation along the Alzheimer's disease continuum

Author:

Peters‐Founshtein Gregory12ORCID,Gazit Lidor13,Naveh Tahel13,Domachevsky Liran24,Korczyn Amos D.5,Bernstine Hanna467,Shaharabani‐Gargir Limor4,Groshar David46,Marshall Gad A.8,Arzy Shahar13

Affiliation:

1. The Computational Neuropsychiatry Lab, Department of Medical Neurobiology, Faculty of Medicine Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem Israel

2. Department of Nuclear Medicine Sheba Medical Center Ramat‐Gan Israel

3. Department of Neurology Hadassah Hebrew University Medical School Jerusalem Israel

4. Department of Nuclear Medicine Assuta Medical Center Tel‐Aviv Israel

5. Department of Neurology Tel‐Aviv University Tel‐Aviv Israel

6. Department of Imaging Tel‐Aviv University Tel‐Aviv Israel

7. Department of Nuclear Medicine Rabin Medical Center Petah Tikva Israel

8. Department of Neurology, Center for Alzheimer Research and Treatment, Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractOrientation is a fundamental cognitive faculty and the bedrock of the neurologic examination. Orientation is defined as the alignment between an individual's internal representation and the external world in the spatial, temporal, and social domains. While spatial disorientation is a recognized hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD), little is known about disorientation beyond space in AD. This study aimed to explore disorientation in spatial, temporal, and social domains along the AD continuum. Fifty‐one participants along the AD continuum performed an ecological orientation task in the spatial, temporal, and social domains while undergoing functional MRI. Disorientation in AD followed a three‐way association between orientation domain, brain region, and disease stage. Specifically, patients with early amnestic mild cognitive impairment exhibited spatio‐temporal disorientation and reduced brain activity in temporoparietal regions, while patients with AD dementia showed additional social disorientation and reduced brain activity in frontoparietal regions. Furthermore, patterns of hypoactivation overlapped different subnetworks of the default mode network, patterns of fluorodeoxyglucose hypometabolism, and cortical atrophy characteristic of AD. Our results suggest that AD may encompass a disorder of orientation, characterized by a biphasic process manifesting as early spatio‐temporal and late social disorientation. As such, disorientation may offer a unique window into the clinicopathological progression of AD.Significance statementDespite extensive research into Alzheimer's disease (AD), its core cognitive deficit remains a matter of debate. In this study, we investigated whether orientation, defined as the ability to align internal representations with the external world in spatial, temporal, and social domains, constitutes a core cognitive deficit in AD. To do so, we used PET‐fMRI imaging to collect behavioral, functional, and metabolic data from 51 participants along the AD continuum. Our findings suggest that AD may constitute a disorder of orientation, characterized by an early spatio‐temporal disorientation and followed by late social disorientation, manifesting in task‐evoked and neurodegenerative changes. We propose that a profile of disorientation across multiple domains offers a unique window into the progression of AD and as such could greatly benefit disease diagnosis, monitoring, and evaluation of treatment response.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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