Impaired Color Discrimination—A Specific Marker of Hallucinations in Lewy Body Disorders

Author:

Matar Elie1ORCID,Phillips Joseph R.2,Martens Kaylena A. Ehgoetz1,Halliday Glenda M.1,Lewis Simon J. G.1

Affiliation:

1. Brain and Mind Centre and Central Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Camperdown, Sydney, Australia

2. School of Social Sciences and Psychology & Marcs Institute for Brain and Behaviour, Western Sydney University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

There is emerging evidence indicating that color discrimination impairments can predict the development of Lewy body dementia in patients with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder, Parkinson disease, and in patients with mild cognitive impairment. Despite this clear relationship, color vision deficits are not seen uniformly in patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), suggesting a more nuanced association with the underlying neuropathology. Visual hallucinations represent a discriminating feature of DLB, and recent evidence implicates visual pathway dysfunction as a significant contributor to this phenomenon. In this study, we examined the relationship between color vision impairment and visual hallucinations, along with other clinical and neuropsychological features in 24 well-characterized patients with DLB alongside 25 healthy controls. Color discrimination impairment was seen in 16 (67%) of 24 DLB participants with a higher error score relative to controls ( P = .001). We demonstrate for the first time a strong association between color discrimination errors on the Farnsworth-Munsell 100 hue test and both the presence and severity of hallucinatory symptoms in DLB based on clinician-derived ( P = .008) and questionnaire-derived ( P = .03) measures. Correlation with clinical and neuropsychological variables revealed that color discrimination is significantly related to visuospatial difficulties measured by the clock-drawing task ( P = .02) but not to global measures of cognition, motor severity, age, or disease duration in our cohort. Factor analysis confirmed a unique relationship between color discrimination, visual hallucinations, and visuospatial function. Our results suggest that color discrimination does not simply relate to dementia but rather indexes higher order perceptual deficits that may predict visual hallucinations in Lewy body disorders and share a common pathophysiological substrate.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical)

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