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Brain and Behavior Oct 2023The dual syndrome hypothesis proposes that there are two cognitive subtypes in Parkinson's disease (PD): a frontal subtype with executive/attention impairment and...
AIM
The dual syndrome hypothesis proposes that there are two cognitive subtypes in Parkinson's disease (PD): a frontal subtype with executive/attention impairment and gradual cognitive decline, and a posterior-cortical subtype with memory/visuospatial deficits and rapid cognitive decline. We aimed to compare the rate of global cognitive decline between subtypes derived using data-driven methods and explore their longitudinal performance within specific cognitive domains to better understand the prognosis of each subtype.
METHOD
Frontal, posterior-cortical, globally impaired, and cognitively intact PD subtypes were identified at baseline using k-means clustering (N = 85), and 29 participants (34%) returned for follow-up assessments on average 4.87 years from baseline. Linear mixed effects models compared progression of subtypes on global cognition; psychological symptoms; parkinsonism; and the memory, attention, executive, language, and visuospatial cognitive domains.
RESULTS
The frontal subtype was lost to attrition. While rate of change in parkinsonism, anxiety, and apathy differed between subtypes, there was no difference in the rate of global cognitive decline. However, the posterior-cortical subtype declined most rapidly in verbal memory, card sorting, trail making, and judgement of line orientation (JLO), while the cognitively intact group declined most rapidly on verbal memory and semantic fluency. The globally impaired subtype declined most rapidly in JLO, although this should be interpreted with caution due to high attrition.
CONCLUSION
Despite limited sample size, the present study supports the differential progression of the posterior-cortical subtype compared to cognitively intact and globally impaired PD. These results encourage further, large-scale longitudinal investigations of cognitive subtypes in PD.
PubMed: 37574595
DOI: 10.1002/brb3.3218 -
Scientific Reports Nov 2023In China, the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) is increasing, so it is necessary to provide convenient and effective community outreach screening programs for DR,...
In China, the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) is increasing, so it is necessary to provide convenient and effective community outreach screening programs for DR, especially in rural and remote areas. The purpose of this study was to use the results of ophthalmologists as the gold standard to evaluate the accuracy of community general practitioners' judgement and grading of DR to find a feasible and convenient DR screening method to reduce the risk of visual impairment and blindness in known diabetes patients. Retinal images of 1646 diabetic patients who underwent DR screening through teleophthalmology at Nanchang First Hospital were collected for 30 months (January 2020 to June 2022). Retinal images were collected without medication for mydriasis, stored by community general practitioner, and diagnosed by both community general practitioner and ophthalmologist of our hospital through teleophthalmology. The grading of ophthalmologist was used as a reference or gold standard for comparison with that of community general practitioner. A total of 1646 patients and 3185 eyes were examined, including 2310 eyes with DR. The evaluation by the community general practitioner had a Kappa value of 0.578, sensitivity of 80.58%, specificity of 89.94%, and accuracy of 83.38%% in 2020; a Kappa value of 0.685, sensitivity of 95.43%, specificity of 78.55%, and accuracy of 90.77% in 2021; and a Kappa value of 0.744, sensitivity of 93.99%, specificity of 88.97%, and accuracy of 92.86% in 2022. Teleophthalmology helped with large-scale screening of DR and made it possible for community general practitioner to grade images with high accuracy after appropriate training. It is possible to solve the current shortage of eye care personnel, promote the early recognition of disease and reduce the impact of diabetes-associated blindness.
Topics: Humans; Diabetic Retinopathy; Telemedicine; Ophthalmology; Mass Screening; Blindness; Photography; Diabetes Mellitus
PubMed: 37949948
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-46554-6 -
Neurologic Clinics Aug 2023Informed consent (IC) is an ethical and legal requirement grounded in the principle of autonomy. Cognitive impairment may often interfere with decision-making capacity... (Review)
Review
Informed consent (IC) is an ethical and legal requirement grounded in the principle of autonomy. Cognitive impairment may often interfere with decision-making capacity necessitating alternative models of ethically sound deliberation. In cases where the patient lacks decision-making capacity, one must determine the appropriate decision-maker and the criteria used in making a medical decision appropriate for the patient. In this article, I critically discuss the traditional approaches of IC, advance directives, substituted judgment, and best interests. A further suggestion is that thinking about sufficient reasons for or against a course of action is a conceptual enrichment in addition to the concepts of interests and well-being. Finally, I propose another model of collective consensus-seeking decision-making.
Topics: Humans; Mental Competency; Informed Consent; Cognitive Dysfunction; Decision Making
PubMed: 37407097
DOI: 10.1016/j.ncl.2023.03.001 -
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience 2024Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a category of hearing loss that often leads to difficulty in understanding speech and other sounds. Auditory system dysfunction,... (Review)
Review
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a category of hearing loss that often leads to difficulty in understanding speech and other sounds. Auditory system dysfunction, including deafness and auditory trauma, results in cognitive deficits via neuroplasticity. Cognitive impairment (CI) refers to an abnormality in the brain's higher intellectual processes related to learning, memory, thinking and judgment that can lead to severe learning and memory deficits. Studies have established a strong correlation between SNHL and CI, but it remains unclear how SNHL contributes to CI. The purpose of this article is to describe three hypotheses regarding this relationship, the mainstream cognitive load hypothesis, the co-morbidity hypothesis, and the sensory deprivation hypothesis, as well as the latest research progress related to each hypothesis.
PubMed: 38482343
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1368232 -
Clinical Psychology Review Apr 2024What are the major vulnerabilities in people with social anxiety? What are the most promising directions for translational research pertaining to this condition? The... (Review)
Review
What are the major vulnerabilities in people with social anxiety? What are the most promising directions for translational research pertaining to this condition? The present paper provides an integrative summary of basic and applied translational research on social anxiety, emphasizing vulnerability factors. It is divided into two subsections: intrapersonal and interpersonal. The intrapersonal section synthesizes research relating to (a) self-representations and self-referential processes; (b) emotions and their regulation; and (c) cognitive biases: attention, interpretation and judgment, and memory. The interpersonal section summarizes findings regarding the systems of (a) approach and avoidance, (b) affiliation and social rank, and their implications for interpersonal impairments. Our review suggests that the science of social anxiety and, more generally, psychopathology may be advanced by examining processes and their underlying content within broad psychological systems. Increased interaction between basic and applied researchers to diversify and elaborate different perspectives on social anxiety is necessary for progress.
Topics: Humans; Emotions; Fear; Judgment; Attention; Anxiety; Interpersonal Relations
PubMed: 38493675
DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2024.102415 -
Journal of Oral Rehabilitation May 2024Patients with chronic headaches and chronic oro-facial pain commonly present psychosocial issues that can affect social interactions. A possible reason could be that... (Review)
Review
Facial recognition, laterality judgement, alexithymia and resulting central nervous system adaptations in chronic primary headache and facial pain-A systematic review and meta-analysis.
INTRODUCTION
Patients with chronic headaches and chronic oro-facial pain commonly present psychosocial issues that can affect social interactions. A possible reason could be that patients with these disorders might present impairments in facial recognition, laterality judgement and also alexithymia. However, a systematic review summarizing the effects of facial emotion recognition, laterality judgement and alexithymia in individuals with headaches and oro-facial pain is still not available.
AIM
The main objective of this systematic review (SR) and meta-analysis (MA) was to compile and synthesize the evidence on the occurrence of alexithymia, deficits in laterality or left-right (LR) recognition and/or facial emotion recognition (FER) in patients with chronic headache and facial pain.
METHODS
Electronic searches were conducted in five databases (up to September 2023) and a manual search to identify relevant studies. The outcomes of interest were alexithymia scores, speed and accuracy in LR and/or FER, or any other quantitative data assessing body image distortions. The screening process, data extraction, risk of bias and data analysis were performed by two independent assessors following standards for systematic reviews.
RESULTS
From 1395 manuscripts found, only 34 studies met the criteria. The overall quality/certainty of the evidence was very low. Although the results should be interpreted carefully, individuals with chronic headaches showed significantly higher levels of alexithymia when compared to healthy individuals. No conclusive results were found for the other variables of interest.
CONCLUSION
Although the overall evidence from this review is very low, people with chronic primary headaches and oro-facial pain could be regularly screened for alexithymia to guarantee appropriate management.
PubMed: 38803203
DOI: 10.1111/joor.13742 -
Journal of Audiology & Otology Jan 2024The discrepancies between the objective and subjective measurements used to select and fit hearing aids indirectly impact the perceived benefit and perception in the...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES
The discrepancies between the objective and subjective measurements used to select and fit hearing aids indirectly impact the perceived benefit and perception in the presence of noise. This study aimed to bridge the gap between objective and subjective measurements in hearing aid fitting by adapting and validating the "Perceptual Performance Test (PPT)" in Malayalam. Subjects and.
METHODS
Standardized Malayalam-language sentences were used to adapt PPT and administer it to 65 native Malayalam speakers (30 normal and 35 hearing impaired). Performance and perception speech recognition thresholds in noise (SRTN) and Performance-Perceptual Discrepancy (PPDIS) were evaluated at various noise levels along with Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (HHIE) or Adults (HHIA).
RESULTS
Both perceptual and performance SRTNs were better among normal-hearing individuals than in the hearing-impaired group. Moreover, the participants with hearing impairment were found to have a significant effect of noise level on both the measures, which was otherwise not seen among normal-hearing individuals. The normative criteria for PPDIS were established to categorize the individuals as under-, over-, or accurate estimators. The performance and perception outcomes varied significantly between groups (normal hearing and hearing impaired) and across noise levels. Furthermore, there was a positive correlation between perceptual and performance SRTNs with emotional and social subscales and total HHIE/A scores. Additionally, a negative association was noted between PPDIS values and HHIE/A scores.
CONCLUSIONS
The adapted test is a valid and reliable tool for evaluating the benefit of hearing aids. PPDIS can provide crucial information to audiologists regarding an individual's judgement about their hearing ability, with an explanation for the discrepancy between objective and subjective reports of hearing impairments.
PubMed: 37953516
DOI: 10.7874/jao.2023.00073 -
IEEE Sensors Journal Dec 2023Consuming excessive amounts of alcohol causes impaired mobility and judgment and driving accidents, resulting in more than 800 injuries and fatalities each day. Passive...
Consuming excessive amounts of alcohol causes impaired mobility and judgment and driving accidents, resulting in more than 800 injuries and fatalities each day. Passive methods to detect intoxicated drivers beyond the safe driving limit can facilitate Just-In-Time alerts and reduce Driving Under the Influence (DUI) incidents. Popularly-owned smartphones are not only equipped with motion sensors (accelerometer and gyroscope) that can be employed for passively collecting gait (walk) data but also have the processing power to run computationally expensive machine learning models. In this paper, we advance the state-of-the-art by proposing a novel method that utilizes a Bi-linear Convolution Neural Network (BiCNN) for analyzing smartphone accelerometer and gyroscope data to determine whether a smartphone user is over the legal driving limit (0.08) from their gait. After segmenting the gait data into steps, we converted the smartphone motion sensor data to a Gramian Angular Field (GAF) image and then leveraged the BiCNN architecture for intoxication classification. Distinguishing GAF-encoded images of the gait of intoxicated vs. sober users is challenging as the differences between the classes (intoxicated vs. sober) are subtle, also known as a fine-grained image classification problem. The BiCNN neural network has previously produced state-of-the-art results on fine-grained image classification of natural images. To the best of our knowledge, our work is the first to innovatively utilize the BiCNN to classify GAF encoded images of smartphone gait data in order to detect intoxication. Prior work had explored using the BiCNN to classify natural images or explored other gait-related tasks but not intoxication Our complete intoxication classification pipeline consists of several important pre-processing steps carefully adapted to the BAC classification task, including step detection and segmentation, data normalization to account for inter-subject variability, data fusion, GAF image generation from time-series data, and a BiCNN classification model. In rigorous evaluation, our BiCNN model achieves an accuracy of 83.5%, outperforming the previous state-of-the-art and demonstrating the feasibility of our approach.
PubMed: 38186565
DOI: 10.1109/jsen.2023.3248868 -
Brain Impairment : a Multidisciplinary... Dec 2023Deficits in decision-making are a common consequence of moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Less is known, however, about how individuals with TBI perform on...
BACKGROUND AND AIM
Deficits in decision-making are a common consequence of moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Less is known, however, about how individuals with TBI perform on moral decision-making tasks. To address this gap in the literature, the current study probed moral decision-making in a sample of individuals with TBI using a widely employed experimental measure.
METHODS/HYPOTHESIS
We administered a set of 50 trolley-type dilemmas to 31 individuals with TBI and 31 demographically matched, neurotypical comparison participants. We hypothesized that individuals with TBI would be more likely to offer utilitarian responses to personal dilemmas than neurotypical peers.
RESULTS
In contrast to our hypothesis, we observed that individuals with TBI were not more likely to offer utilitarian responses for personal dilemmas.
CONCLUSION
Our results suggest that moral decision-making ability is not uniformly impaired following TBI. Rather, neuroanatomical (lesion location) and demographic (age at injury) characteristics may be more predictive of a disruption in moral decision-making than TBI diagnosis or injury severity alone. These results inform the neurobiology of moral decision-making and have implications for characterizing patterns of spared and impaired cognitive abilities in TBI.
Topics: Adult; Humans; Decision Making; Cognition; Brain Injuries, Traumatic; Morals
PubMed: 38124901
DOI: 10.1017/BrImp.2022.11 -
Journal of the American Geriatrics... Jun 2024Falls are a major cause of preventable death, injury, and reduced independence in adults aged 65 years and older. The American Geriatrics Society and British...
Falls are a major cause of preventable death, injury, and reduced independence in adults aged 65 years and older. The American Geriatrics Society and British Geriatrics Society (AGS/BGS) published a guideline in 2001, revised in 2011, addressing common risk factors for falls and providing recommendations to reduce fall risk in community-dwelling older adults. In 2022, the World Falls Guidelines (WFG) Task Force created updated, globally oriented fall prevention risk stratification, assessment, management, and interventions for older adults. Our objective was to briefly summarize the new WFG, compare them to the AGS/BGS guideline, and offer suggestions for implementation in the United States. We reviewed 11 of the 12 WFG topics related to community-dwelling older adults and agree with several additions to the prior AGS/BGS guideline, including assessment and intervention for hearing impairment and concern for falling, assessment and individualized exercises for older adults with cognitive impairment, and performing a standardized assessment such as STOPPFall before prescribing a medication that could potentially increase fall risk. Notable areas of difference include: (1) AGS continues to recommend screening all patients aged 65+ annually for falls, rather than just those with a history of falls or through opportunistic case finding; (2) AGS recommends continued use of the Timed Up and Go as a gait assessment, rather than relying on gait speed; and (3) AGS recommends clinical judgment on whether or not to check an ECG for those at risk for falling. Our review and translation of the WFG for a US audience offers guidance for healthcare and other providers and teams to reduce fall risk in older adults.
Topics: Accidental Falls; Humans; Aged; United States; Geriatric Assessment; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Geriatrics; Risk Assessment; Societies, Medical; Independent Living; Aged, 80 and over; Risk Factors; Female; Male
PubMed: 38131656
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.18734