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Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study

Successful socialization requires the ability of understanding of others’ mental states. This ability called as mentalization (Theory of Mind) may become deficient and contribute to everyday life difficulties in multiple sclerosis. We aimed to explore the impact of brain pathology on mentalization p...

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Autores principales: Mike, Andrea, Strammer, Erzsebet, Aradi, Mihaly, Orsi, Gergely, Perlaki, Gabor, Hajnal, Andras, Sandor, Janos, Banati, Miklos, Illes, Eniko, Zaitsev, Alexander, Herold, Robert, Guttmann, Charles R. G., Illes, Zsolt
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3862626/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082422
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author Mike, Andrea
Strammer, Erzsebet
Aradi, Mihaly
Orsi, Gergely
Perlaki, Gabor
Hajnal, Andras
Sandor, Janos
Banati, Miklos
Illes, Eniko
Zaitsev, Alexander
Herold, Robert
Guttmann, Charles R. G.
Illes, Zsolt
author_facet Mike, Andrea
Strammer, Erzsebet
Aradi, Mihaly
Orsi, Gergely
Perlaki, Gabor
Hajnal, Andras
Sandor, Janos
Banati, Miklos
Illes, Eniko
Zaitsev, Alexander
Herold, Robert
Guttmann, Charles R. G.
Illes, Zsolt
author_sort Mike, Andrea
collection PubMed
description Successful socialization requires the ability of understanding of others’ mental states. This ability called as mentalization (Theory of Mind) may become deficient and contribute to everyday life difficulties in multiple sclerosis. We aimed to explore the impact of brain pathology on mentalization performance in multiple sclerosis. Mentalization performance of 49 patients with multiple sclerosis was compared to 24 age- and gender matched healthy controls. T1- and T2-weighted three-dimensional brain MRI images were acquired at 3Tesla from patients with multiple sclerosis and 18 gender- and age matched healthy controls. We assessed overall brain cortical thickness in patients with multiple sclerosis and the scanned healthy controls, and measured the total and regional T1 and T2 white matter lesion volumes in patients with multiple sclerosis. Performances in tests of recognition of mental states and emotions from facial expressions and eye gazes correlated with both total T1-lesion load and regional T1-lesion load of association fiber tracts interconnecting cortical regions related to visual and emotion processing (genu and splenium of corpus callosum, right inferior longitudinal fasciculus, right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus). Both of these tests showed correlations with specific cortical areas involved in emotion recognition from facial expressions (right and left fusiform face area, frontal eye filed), processing of emotions (right entorhinal cortex) and socially relevant information (left temporal pole). Thus, both disconnection mechanism due to white matter lesions and cortical thinning of specific brain areas may result in cognitive deficit in multiple sclerosis affecting emotion and mental state processing from facial expressions and contributing to everyday and social life difficulties of these patients.
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spelling pubmed-38626262013-12-17 Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study Mike, Andrea Strammer, Erzsebet Aradi, Mihaly Orsi, Gergely Perlaki, Gabor Hajnal, Andras Sandor, Janos Banati, Miklos Illes, Eniko Zaitsev, Alexander Herold, Robert Guttmann, Charles R. G. Illes, Zsolt PLoS One Research Article Successful socialization requires the ability of understanding of others’ mental states. This ability called as mentalization (Theory of Mind) may become deficient and contribute to everyday life difficulties in multiple sclerosis. We aimed to explore the impact of brain pathology on mentalization performance in multiple sclerosis. Mentalization performance of 49 patients with multiple sclerosis was compared to 24 age- and gender matched healthy controls. T1- and T2-weighted three-dimensional brain MRI images were acquired at 3Tesla from patients with multiple sclerosis and 18 gender- and age matched healthy controls. We assessed overall brain cortical thickness in patients with multiple sclerosis and the scanned healthy controls, and measured the total and regional T1 and T2 white matter lesion volumes in patients with multiple sclerosis. Performances in tests of recognition of mental states and emotions from facial expressions and eye gazes correlated with both total T1-lesion load and regional T1-lesion load of association fiber tracts interconnecting cortical regions related to visual and emotion processing (genu and splenium of corpus callosum, right inferior longitudinal fasciculus, right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus). Both of these tests showed correlations with specific cortical areas involved in emotion recognition from facial expressions (right and left fusiform face area, frontal eye filed), processing of emotions (right entorhinal cortex) and socially relevant information (left temporal pole). Thus, both disconnection mechanism due to white matter lesions and cortical thinning of specific brain areas may result in cognitive deficit in multiple sclerosis affecting emotion and mental state processing from facial expressions and contributing to everyday and social life difficulties of these patients. Public Library of Science 2013-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3862626/ /pubmed/24349280 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082422 Text en © 2013 Mike et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mike, Andrea
Strammer, Erzsebet
Aradi, Mihaly
Orsi, Gergely
Perlaki, Gabor
Hajnal, Andras
Sandor, Janos
Banati, Miklos
Illes, Eniko
Zaitsev, Alexander
Herold, Robert
Guttmann, Charles R. G.
Illes, Zsolt
Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title_full Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title_fullStr Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title_full_unstemmed Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title_short Disconnection Mechanism and Regional Cortical Atrophy Contribute to Impaired Processing of Facial Expressions and Theory of Mind in Multiple Sclerosis: A Structural MRI Study
title_sort disconnection mechanism and regional cortical atrophy contribute to impaired processing of facial expressions and theory of mind in multiple sclerosis: a structural mri study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3862626/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349280
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082422
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