Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0426980 (motor symptom)
471 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Next to the typical motor signs, Parkinson's disease (PD) goes along with neuropsychiatric symptoms, amongst others affecting social cognition. Particularly, Theory of Mind (ToM) impairments have mostly been associated with right hemispherical brain dysfunction, so that it might prevail in patients with left dominant PD. Fourty-four PD patients, twenty-four with left and twenty with right dominant motor symptoms, engaged in the Reading the Mind in the Eyes (RME) and the Faux Pas Detection Test (FPD) to assess affective and cognitive ToM. The results were correlated with performance in further cognitive tests, and analyzed with respect to associations with the side of motor symptom dominance and severity of motor symptoms. No association of ToM performance with right hemispheric dysfunction was found. RME results were inversely correlated with motor symptom severity, while FPD performance was found to correlate with the performance in verbal fluency tasks and the overall cognitive evaluation. Affective ToM was found associated with motor symptom severity and cognitive ToM predominantly with executive function, but no effect of PD lateralization on this was identified. The results suggest that deficits in social cognition occur as a sequel of the general corticobasal pathology in PD, rather than as a result of hemisphere-specific dysfunction.
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PMID:Theory of mind performance in Parkinson's disease is associated with motor and cognitive functions, but not with symptom lateralization. 2858 26

The possible hemispheric specialization of the basal ganglia during emotional prosody (i.e., vocal emotion) processing has still to be elucidated. Coupled with affective measures and neuroimaging, Parkinson's disease offers a unique opportunity to study this question, on account of its characteristically asymmetric striatal dysfunction, which translates into predominantly contralateral motor symptoms. We investigated the cerebral metabolic bases of emotional prosody recognition in patients with Parkinson's disease with left- versus right-lateralized motor symptoms, postulating that patients with greater right hemispheric brain dysfunction have a specific impairment that correlates with the metabolic modification of a brain network known to be involved in emotional prosody. A total of 38 patients performed a validated emotional prosody recognition task and underwent a resting-state F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose PET scan, as well as clinical, motor, neuropsychological, and psychiatric assessments. Patients' performances were compared with those of 45 healthy controls. As expected, vocal emotion recognition was significantly poorer among patients with left-sided motor symptoms than among both right-sided patients and controls. There was no significant difference between right-sided patients and controls. This effect was observed for both the total score and the happiness subscore. Interestingly, regressions showed that the greater the emotional misattribution, the greater the patients' age and asymmetric motor symptom severity. Finally, at the metabolic level, positive correlations were found between the happiness recognition subscore and the metabolism of the right orbitofrontal cortex in patients with left-sided motor symptoms. A right orbitofrontal-basal ganglia coupling seems to be specifically involved in the vocal emotion recognition deficit observed in Parkinson's disease. The asymmetry of motor symptoms is thus an important clinical factor, in that it may influence the presence or severity of affective disorders in Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:Hemispheric specialization of the basal ganglia during vocal emotion decoding: Evidence from asymmetric Parkinson's disease and 18FDG PET. 3004 Sep 55