Altered visual entrainment in patients with Alzheimer’s disease: magnetoencephalography evidence

Author:

Springer Seth D12ORCID,Wiesman Alex I23ORCID,May Pamela E2,Schantell Mikki12ORCID,Johnson Hallie J1,Willett Madelyn P1,Castelblanco Camilo A1ORCID,Eastman Jacob A1,Christopher-Hayes Nicholas J14,Wolfson Sara L2ORCID,Johnson Craig M2,Murman Daniel L25,Wilson Tony W126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Human Neuroscience, Boys Town National Research Hospital , Omaha, NE 68010 , USA

2. College of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center , Omaha, NE 68198 , USA

3. Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

4. Center for Mind and Brain, University of California Davis , Davis, CA 95616 , USA

5. Memory Disorders & Behavioral Neurology Program, University of Nebraska Medical Center , Omaha, NE 68010 , USA

6. Department of Pharmacology & Neuroscience, Creighton University , Omaha, NE 68178 , USA

Abstract

AbstractRecent research has indicated that rhythmic visual entrainment may be useful in clearing pathological protein deposits in the central nervous system of mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease. However, visual entrainment studies in human patients with Alzheimer’s disease are rare, and as such the degree to which these patients exhibit aberrations in the neural tracking of rhythmic visual stimuli is unknown. To fill this gap, we recorded magnetoencephalography during a 15 Hz visual entrainment paradigm in amyloid-positive patients on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum and compared their neural responses to a demographically matched group of biomarker-negative healthy controls. Magnetoencephalography data were imaged using a beamformer and virtual sensor data were extracted from the peak visual entrainment responses. Our results indicated that, relative to healthy controls, participants on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum exhibited significantly stronger 15 Hz entrainment in primary visual cortices relative to a pre-stimulus baseline period. However, the two groups exhibited comparable absolute levels of neural entrainment, and higher absolute levels of entertainment predicted greater Mini-mental Status Examination scores, such that those patients whose absolute entrainment amplitude was closer to the level seen in controls had better cognitive function. In addition, 15 Hz periodic activity, but not aperiodic activity, during the pre-stimulus baseline period was significantly decreased in patients on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum. This pattern of results indicates that patients on the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum exhibited increased visual entrainment to rhythmic stimuli and that this increase is likely compensatory in nature. More broadly, these results show that visual entrainment is altered in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and should be further examined in future studies, as changes in the capacity to entrain visual stimuli may prove useful as a marker of Alzheimer’s disease progression.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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