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Selective impairment of auditory attention processing in idiopathic generalized epilepsies: Implications for their cognitive pathophysiology
Authors
P. Patrikelis Lucci, G. Fasilis, T. Korfias, S. Messinis, L. Kosmidis, M.H. Lagogianni, C. Konstantakopoulos, G. Manolia, S. Sakas, D. Gatzonis, S.
Publication date
1 January 2020
Publisher
Abstract
The neuropsychological characteristics of Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies (IGEs) as a wide syndrome encompassing different clinical entities have been as yet not well understood. We have studied neuropsychological performance in patients suffering Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy (JME) and Generalized Tonic Clonic Seizures (IGE-GTCS-only) to provide indirect-cognitive evidence on the pathophysiology of IGE-related neuropsychological dysfunction. Greater arousal-related impairments were expected for the auditory modality, by drawing on previous anatomo-clinical and neuro-evolutionary accounts. We have studied neurocognitive functioning in 26 IGE patients, suffering either JME (n = 16) or IGE-GTCS-only (n = 10), and their healthy counterparts consisted of 26 (18 females) demographically matched participants. IGE patients (JME and IGE-GTCS-only) did worse with respect to HC (healthy controls) in visual- and auditory- speed of information processing (reaction time), auditory-vigilance and -response inhibition, visuo-motor coordination, visual working memory and motor speed, delayed visual recall, immediate- and delayed verbal episodic recall, lexical access and retrieval, semantic associative processing, auditory-verbal memory span and verbal learning. Although both IGE-GTCS-only and JME patients delayed episodic recall was defective, the former did significantly worse. We believe that IGE patients' neuropsychological derailments represent indirect-secondary manifestations of a primary cortical tone deregulation inherent to IGEs' pathophysiology. In particular, IGE patients’ worse-dissociated performance in auditory TOVA—also seen previously in TBI and schizophrenia—may implicate a grater vulnerability of the auditory information processing system, as well as a possibly shared cognitive pathophysiological component between IGE and the above nosologies. © 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
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Last time updated on 10/02/2023