Side of onset of motor symptoms influences cognition in Parkinson's disease
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Neurology
- Vol. 34 (4) , 579-584
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.410340412
Abstract
Studies attempting to relate cognitive impairment to asymmetry of motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease (PD) have found contradictory results. We examined 88 patients with unilateral onset of idiopathic PD who underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment, including language, visuosptial abilities, abstraction and reasoning, attention and mental tracking, set shifting, and memory. Patients whose motor signs began on the left side of the body consistently performed more poorly on the battery of cognitive measures than did patients with right-side onset. Significant differences were found on immediate and delayed verbal recall, word retrieval, semantic verbal fluency, visuospatial analysis, abstract reasoning, attention span, and mental tracking. These differences could not be attributed to differences in the overall severity of motor symptoms at the time of cognitive assessment, or the current pattern of motor asymmetry. This finding suggests that damage to right-hemisphere dopamine systems plays a disproportionately greater role in PD-related cognitive decline than a presumably comparable left-hemisphere dopamine depletion.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neuropsychological correlates of brain atrophy in Parkinson's disease: A CT‐scan studyMovement Disorders, 1993
- Asymmetrical cognitive differences associated with hemiparkinsonismArchives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 1992
- 6-Hydroxydopamine lesion of the rat prefrontal cortex increases locomotor activity, impairs acquisition of delayed alternation tasks, but does not affect uninterrupted tasks in the radial mazeBehavioural Brain Research, 1990
- Mesencephalic Dopaminergic Neurons: Role in the General Economy of the BrainAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1988
- FRONTAL LOBE DYSFUNCTION IN PARKINSON'S DISEASEBrain, 1986
- A cortical network for directed attention and unilateral neglectAnnals of Neurology, 1981
- Cognitive Deficit Caused by Regional Depletion of Dopamine in Prefrontal Cortex of Rhesus MonkeyScience, 1979
- Right hemispheric dominance for mediating cerebral activationNeuropsychologia, 1979
- “Mini-mental state”Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1975
- ParkinsonismNeurology, 1967