Making it count : novel behavioural tasks to quantify symptoms of dementia with Lewy bodies

  • Joseph R. Phillips

Western Sydney University thesis: Doctoral thesis

Abstract

Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a neurodegenerative disease and a common cause of dementia in the elderly. The primary pathology of DLB is the mis-folding of the a-synuclein protein, classifying DLB as a synucleinopathy. However, concomitant pathologies are commonly found in post-mortem examination of DLB patients that may complicate diagnosis. Furthermore, DLB is a relatively new disease, first discovered in 1976, while the first official diagnostic criteria released in 1996. Consequently, the diagnostic criteria for DLB have evolved as more is learnt about the clinical and neuropathological profile. Synucleinopathies are also known to be heterogeneous, with no single symptom or biomarker present in all DLB cases. Instead, combinations of common symptoms lead to a diagnosis of probable DLB. Two of the most prominent and debilitating symptoms of DLB are visual hallucinations and cognitive fluctuations. Visual hallucinations (VH) in DLB patients are typically vivid, well-formed percepts and are a major cause of patient and caregiver stress as well as a risk factor for the patient being placed into professional care. Cognitive fluctuations (CF) involve a cycling change in attention and alertness and may occur on a daily or monthly basis, while drops in awareness may last seconds or hours. Currently, the only tools to measure cognitive fluctuations or visual hallucinations are scales or questionnaires that rely on responses from the patient or informant. Furthermore, severity of the symptom is then ranked on an arbitrary ranking system. While this method has advantages in a clinical setting, the subjective nature of the scales combined with the ranking of scores results in a loss of sensitivity. In a research setting, especially imaging or clinical trials, objective measures that are sensitive to changes in symptom severity are highly valued. This allows researchers to assess the relationship between behavioural and fMRI data and clinicians to observe subtle changes in severity. Furthermore, the measures need to be easy to conduct as patients are often severely impaired. The aim of this thesis is to test cognitive function using three paradigms that are novel to DLB patients: Sustained Attention Response Task (SART), the Mental Rotation (MR) task and the Bistable Percept Paradigm (BPP). Overall, this thesis provided the groundwork needed before these three tasks can be utilised in a clinical or research setting. Moreover, as each task was accessible to DLB patients and provided a measure associated with VH or CF, they may prove useful for future neuroimaging/neuropsychological studies.
Date of Award2023
Original languageEnglish

Keywords

  • Lewy body dementia
  • diagnosis
  • cognition
  • ability testing

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