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-List Of Titles -Visuomotor integration deficits precede clinical onset in Huntington's disease

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/134328

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Title
Visuomotor integration deficits precede clinical onset in Huntington's disease
Related
Neuropsychologia, Vol. 49, Issue 2, (2011), p.264-270
DOI
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.11.016
Publisher
Elsevier
Date
2011
Author/Creator
Say, Miranda J
Author/Creator
Jones, Rebecca
Author/Creator
Tabrizi, Sarah J
Author/Creator
Stout, Julie C
Author/Creator
Scahill, Rachael I
Author/Creator
Dumas, Eve M
Author/Creator
Coleman, Allison
Author/Creator
Dar Santos, Rachelle C
Author/Creator
Justo, Damian
Author/Creator
Campbell, J. Colin
Author/Creator
Queller, Sarah
Author/Creator
Shores, E. Arthur
Description
Objectives: Visuomotor integration deficits have been documented in Huntington disease (HD), with disproportionately more impairment when direct visual feedback is unavailable. Visuomotor integration under direct and indirect visual feedback conditions has not been investigated in the stage before clinical onset ('premanifest'). However, given evidence of posterior cortical atrophy in pr emanifest HD, we predicted visuomotor integration would be adversely affected, with greater impairment under conditions of indirect visual feedback. Methods: 239 subjects with the HD CAG expansion, ranging from more than a decade before predicted clinical onset until early stage disease, and 122 controls, completed a circle-tracing task, which included both direct and indirect visual feedback conditions. Measures included accuracy, speed, and speed of error detection and correction. Using brain images acquired with 3T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we generated grey and white matter volumes with voxel-based morphometry, and analyzed correlations with circle-tracing performance. Results: Compared with controls, early HD was associated with lower accuracy and slower performance in both circle-tracing conditions. Premanifest HD was associated with lower accuracy in both conditions and fewer rotations in the direct condition. Comparing performance in the indirect condition with the direct condition, HD gene expansion-carriers exhibited a disproportionate increase in errors relative to controls. Premanifest and early HD groups required longer to detect and correct errors, especially in the indirect condition. Slower performance in the indirect condition was associated with lower grey matter volumes in the left somatosensory cortex in VBM analyses. Conclusions: Visuomotor integration deficits are evident many years before the clinical onset of HD, with deficits in speed, accuracy, and speed of error detection and correction. The visuomotor transformation demands of the indirect condition result in a disproportionate decrease in accuracy in the HD groups. Slower performance under indirect visual feedback was associated with atrophy of the left-hemisphere somatosensory cortex, which may reflect the proprioceptive demands of the task.
Description
7 page(s)
Subject Keyword
Huntington disease
Subject Keyword
Motor coordination
Subject Keyword
Premanifest
Subject Keyword
Visuomotor integration
Subject Keyword
Visuospatial function
Subject Keyword
Volumetric MRI
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Psychology

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/134328
Identifier
ISSN:0028-3932
Identifier
mq_res-ext-2-s2.0-78650871042
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Neuropsychologia"
 
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