An attentional and working memory theory of hallucination vulnerability in frontotemporal dementia

Author:

Devenney Emma M12,Tse Nga Yan13ORCID,O’Callaghan Claire14ORCID,Kumfor Fiona15ORCID,Ahmed Rebekah M16ORCID,Caga Jashelle1,Hazelton Jessica L5678ORCID,Carrick James1ORCID,Halliday Glenda M14ORCID,Piguet Olivier15ORCID,Kiernan Matthew C91011ORCID,Hodges John R1

Affiliation:

1. Brain & Mind Centre, The University of Sydney , Sydney 2050 , Australia

2. Neurology Department, Western Sydney Local Health District , Sydney 2145 , Australia

3. Systems Lab, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne , Parkville 3052 , Australia

4. School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney , Sydney 2050 , Australia

5. School of Psychology, The University of Sydney , Sydney 2050 , Australia

6. Memory and Cognition Clinic, Institute of Clinical Neurosciences, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital , Sydney 2050 , Australia

7. Cognitive Neuroscience Center (CNC), Universidad de San Andrés , Buenos Aires B1644BID , Argentina

8. Latin American Brain Health Institute (Brain Lat), Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez , Santiago 7941169 , Chile

9. Neuroscience Research Australia , Randwick 2031 , Australia

10. Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of New South Wales 2031 , Australia

11. Neurology Department, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District , NSW 2031 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The rate and prevalence of hallucinations in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia is well established. The mechanisms for underlying vulnerability however are the least well described in FTD compared with other neuropsychiatric conditions, despite the presence of these features significantly complicating the diagnostic process. As such, this present study aimed to provide a detailed characterization of the neural, cognitive and behavioural profile associated with a predisposition to hallucinatory experiences in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. In total, 153 patients with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia were recruited sequentially for this study. A group of patients with well characterized hallucinations and good-quality volumetric MRI scans (n = 23) were genetically and demographically matched to a group without hallucinations (n = 23) and a healthy control cohort (n = 23). All patients were assessed at their initial visit by means of a detailed clinical interview, a comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tests and MRI. Data were analysed according to three levels: (i) the relationship between neural structures, cognition, behaviour and hallucinations in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia; (ii) the impact of the C9orf72 expansion; and (iii) hallucination subtype on expression of hallucinations. Basic and complex attentional (including divided attention and working memory) and visual function measures differed between groups (all P < 0.001) with hallucinators demonstrating poorer performance, along with evidence of structural changes centred on the prefrontal cortex, caudate and cerebellum (corrected for False Discovery Rate at P < 0.05 with a cluster threshold of 100 contiguous voxels). Attentional processes were also implicated in C9orf72 carriers with hallucinations with structural changes selectively involving the thalamus. Patients with visual hallucinations in isolation showed a similar pattern with emphasis on cerebellar atrophy. Our findings provided novel insights that attentional and visual function subsystems and related distributed brain structures are implicated in the generation of hallucinations in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, that dissociate across C9orf72, sporadic behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and for the visual subtype of hallucinations. This loading on attentional and working memory measures is in line with current mechanistic models of hallucinations that frequently suggest a failure of integration of cognitive and perceptual processes. We therefore propose a novel cognitive and neural model for hallucination predisposition in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia that aligns with a transdiagnostic model for hallucinations across neurodegeneration and psychiatry.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia

dementia team

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders

National Health and Medical Research Council

MND Research Institute of Australia

National Health and Medical Research Council Postgraduate scholarship

National Health and Medical Research Council fellowships

University of Sydney

National Health and Medical Research Council Career Development Fellowship

National Health and Medical Research Council post-doctoral fellowship

National Health and Medical Research Council Leadership Fellow

National Health and Medical Research Council Partnership Grant

Practitioner Fellowship

National Health and Medical Research Council Leadership Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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