AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how individuals with Huntington's disease (HD), characterized by a CAG gene expansion, perform on antisaccade (AS) tasks, which require them to look in the opposite direction of a visual stimulus.
  • Researchers categorized participants into three groups: early HD, premanifest HD, and healthy controls, and assessed their brain activity using functional MRI while they performed AS tasks.
  • Findings indicated that the brain's response to errors during the AS task differed significantly between the groups, suggesting that the neural mechanisms for error detection may become impaired early in the disease progression of HD.

Article Abstract

Objective: Individuals with the trinucleotide CAG expansion (CAG+) that causes Huntington's disease (HD) have impaired performance on antisaccade (AS) tasks that require directing gaze in the mirror opposite direction of visual targets. This study aimed to identify the neural substrates underlying altered antisaccadic performance.

Method: Three groups of participants were recruited: (1) Imminent and early manifest HD (early HD, n = 8); (2) premanifest (presymptomatic) CAG+ (preHD, n = 10); and (3) CAG unexpanded (CAG-) controls (n = 12). All participants completed a uniform study visit that included a neurological evaluation, neuropsychological battery, molecular testing, and functional MRI during an AS task. The blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response was obtained during saccade preparation and saccade execution for both correct and incorrect responses using regression analysis.

Results: Significant group differences in BOLD response were observed when comparing incorrect AS to correct AS execution. Specifically, as the percentage of incorrect AS increased, BOLD responses in the CAG- group decreased progressively in a well-documented reward detection network that includes the presupplementary motor area and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex. In contrast, AS errors in the preHD and early HD groups lacked this relationship with BOLD signal in the error detection network, and BOLD responses to AS errors were smaller in the two CAG+ groups as compared with the CAG- group.

Conclusions: These results are the first to suggest that abnormalities in an error-related response network may underlie early changes in AS eye movements in premanifest and early manifest HD. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3086952PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0021873DOI Listing

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