The striatum in time production: The model of Huntington's disease in longitudinal study.

Neuropsychologia

Département d'Etudes Cognitives, Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL University, Paris, France; Université Paris Est, Faculté de Médecine, Créteil, France; Inserm U955, Equipe E01 Neuropsychologie Interventionnelle, Créteil, France; AP-HP, Centre de référence Maladie de Huntington, Service de Neurologie, Hôpital Henri Mondor-Albert Chenevier, Créteil, France. Electronic address:

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The striatum plays a key role in processing time, and patients with Huntington's disease show deficits in time perception and production, particularly in interval timing tasks.
  • A study found that symptomatic Huntington's disease patients struggled with producing time durations between 4 and 10 seconds, while presymptomatic gene carriers performed similarly to healthy controls.
  • Results linked performance to grey matter volume in the amygdala and caudate, confirming the striatum's involvement in both time perception and production, and indicating that a simple temporal production task could help identify early signs of striatal degeneration in Huntington's disease, though its efficacy for presymptomatic detection remains uncertain.

Article Abstract

The unified model of time processing suggests that the striatum is a central structure involved in all tasks that require the processing of temporal durations. Patients with Huntington's disease exhibit striatal degeneration and a deficit in time perception in interval timing tasks (i.e. for duration ranging from hundreds of milliseconds to minutes), but whether this deficit extends to time production remains unclear. In this study, we investigated whether symptomatic patients (HD, N = 101) or presymptomatic gene carriers (Pre-HD, N = 31) of Huntington's disease had a deficit in time production for durations between 4 and 10 s compared to healthy controls and whether this deficit developed over a year for patients. We found a clear deficit in temporal production for HD patients, whereas Pre-HD performed similarly to Controls. For HD patients and Pre-HD participants, task performance was correlated with grey matter volume in the amygdala and caudate, bilaterally. These results confirm that the striatum is involved in interval timing not only in perception but also in production, in accordance with the unified model of time processing. Furthermore, exploratory factor analyses on our data indicated that temporal production was associated with clinical assessments of psychomotor and executive functions. Finally, when retested twelve months later, the deficit of HD patients remained stable, although striatal degeneration was more pronounced. Thus, the simple, short and language-independent temporal production task may be a useful clinical tool to detect striatal degeneration in patients in early stages of Huntington's disease. However, its usefulness to detect presymptomatic stages or for monitoring the evolution of HD over a year seems limited.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108459DOI Listing

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