Kehagia_2013_Neurodegener.Dis_11_79

Reference

Title : Cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: the dual syndrome hypothesis - Kehagia_2013_Neurodegener.Dis_11_79
Author(s) : Kehagia AA , Barker RA , Robbins TW
Ref : Neurodegener Dis , 11 :79 , 2013
Abstract :

Research into the heterogeneous nature of cognitive impairment documented in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) has focused on disentangling deficits that vary between individuals, evolve and respond differentially to pharmacological treatments, and relate differentially to PD dementia (PDD). We summarise studies conducted in our laboratory over the last 2 decades, outlining the incremental development of our hypotheses, the starting point for which is our early work on executive deficits mirroring fronto-striatal dysfunction. We present subsequent findings linking these deficits to a model of dopaminergic function that conforms to an inverted curvilinear function. We review studies that investigated the range of dopamine-independent attentional and visuospatial memory deficits seen in PD, demonstrating that abnormalities in these domains more accurately predict PDD. We conclude with an exposition of the dual syndrome hypothesis, which distinguishes between dopaminergically mediated fronto-striatal executive impairments and a dementia syndrome with distinctive prodromal visuospatial deficits in which cholinergic treatments offer some clinical benefits.

PubMedSearch : Kehagia_2013_Neurodegener.Dis_11_79
PubMedID: 23038420

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Citations formats

Kehagia AA, Barker RA, Robbins TW (2013)
Cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: the dual syndrome hypothesis
Neurodegener Dis 11 :79

Kehagia AA, Barker RA, Robbins TW (2013)
Neurodegener Dis 11 :79