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Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients

INTRODUCTION: Emotional processing is basic for social behaviour. We examine for the first time the facial emotion processing in long-term HIV-suppressed patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cross-sectional study comparing (ANOVA) six facial emotional processing tasks (two discrimination, two memory and...

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Autores principales: Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia, Perez-Valero, Ignacio, Carvajal-Molina, Fernando, Bayon, Carmen, Montes-Ramirez, Marisa, Ignacio Bernardino, Jose, Arribas, Jose R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25397414
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19664
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author Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia
Perez-Valero, Ignacio
Carvajal-Molina, Fernando
Bayon, Carmen
Montes-Ramirez, Marisa
Ignacio Bernardino, Jose
Arribas, Jose R
author_facet Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia
Perez-Valero, Ignacio
Carvajal-Molina, Fernando
Bayon, Carmen
Montes-Ramirez, Marisa
Ignacio Bernardino, Jose
Arribas, Jose R
author_sort Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Emotional processing is basic for social behaviour. We examine for the first time the facial emotion processing in long-term HIV-suppressed patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cross-sectional study comparing (ANOVA) six facial emotional processing tasks (two discrimination, two memory and two recognition) between HIV-suppressed patients (HIV+) on effective antiretroviral therapy (>2 years) and matched (age, gender) healthy controls (HCs). Accuracy in the recognition of basic emotions (neutral, happiness, sadness, anger and fear) in each recognition task was also compared (Mann–Whitney U test) between HIV+ and HCs. In the subset of HIV+, we evaluate which factors were associated with impaired recognition of basic emotions (accuracy below 50%) by multiple logistic regression analysis. Overall performance in all six emotional tasks were separately compared between neurocognitive impaired and non-impaired HIV+. RESULTS: We included 107 HIV+, mainly Caucasian (89%) male (72%) with a mean age of 47.4 years, neurocognitively non-impaired (75.5%), and 40 HCs. Overall discrimination (p=0.38), memory (p=0.65) and recognition tasks (p=0.29) were similar in both groups. However, HIV+ had lower sadness recognition in both recognition tasks and lower sadness, anger and fear recognition in the facial affect selection task (Figure 1). Only estimated pre-morbid functioning (WAIS-III-R vocabulary subtest score) was significantly associated with sadness (1.99 [95% CI 1.18–3.58]; p=0.01) and anger recognition deficits (2.06 [95% CI 1.14–3.45]; p=0.015) in the facial affect selection task. In HIV+ individuals, neurocognitive impairment was associated with worse memory task results (p<0.01, d=0.88; p<0.01, d=1.48). CONCLUSIONS: We did not find difference in the overall emotion processing between HIV+ and HIV- individuals. However, we found particular recognition deficits in the entire HIV+ sample. Estimated pre-morbid functioning was associated with sadness and anger recognition deficits in the facial affect selection task. Neurocognitive impaired HIV+ had additional memory deficits. These recognition deficits might conduct to social difficulties.
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spelling pubmed-42253622014-11-13 Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia Perez-Valero, Ignacio Carvajal-Molina, Fernando Bayon, Carmen Montes-Ramirez, Marisa Ignacio Bernardino, Jose Arribas, Jose R J Int AIDS Soc Poster Sessions – Abstract P132 INTRODUCTION: Emotional processing is basic for social behaviour. We examine for the first time the facial emotion processing in long-term HIV-suppressed patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cross-sectional study comparing (ANOVA) six facial emotional processing tasks (two discrimination, two memory and two recognition) between HIV-suppressed patients (HIV+) on effective antiretroviral therapy (>2 years) and matched (age, gender) healthy controls (HCs). Accuracy in the recognition of basic emotions (neutral, happiness, sadness, anger and fear) in each recognition task was also compared (Mann–Whitney U test) between HIV+ and HCs. In the subset of HIV+, we evaluate which factors were associated with impaired recognition of basic emotions (accuracy below 50%) by multiple logistic regression analysis. Overall performance in all six emotional tasks were separately compared between neurocognitive impaired and non-impaired HIV+. RESULTS: We included 107 HIV+, mainly Caucasian (89%) male (72%) with a mean age of 47.4 years, neurocognitively non-impaired (75.5%), and 40 HCs. Overall discrimination (p=0.38), memory (p=0.65) and recognition tasks (p=0.29) were similar in both groups. However, HIV+ had lower sadness recognition in both recognition tasks and lower sadness, anger and fear recognition in the facial affect selection task (Figure 1). Only estimated pre-morbid functioning (WAIS-III-R vocabulary subtest score) was significantly associated with sadness (1.99 [95% CI 1.18–3.58]; p=0.01) and anger recognition deficits (2.06 [95% CI 1.14–3.45]; p=0.015) in the facial affect selection task. In HIV+ individuals, neurocognitive impairment was associated with worse memory task results (p<0.01, d=0.88; p<0.01, d=1.48). CONCLUSIONS: We did not find difference in the overall emotion processing between HIV+ and HIV- individuals. However, we found particular recognition deficits in the entire HIV+ sample. Estimated pre-morbid functioning was associated with sadness and anger recognition deficits in the facial affect selection task. Neurocognitive impaired HIV+ had additional memory deficits. These recognition deficits might conduct to social difficulties. International AIDS Society 2014-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4225362/ /pubmed/25397414 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19664 Text en © 2014 Gonzalez-Baeza A et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ 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 work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Poster Sessions – Abstract P132
Gonzalez-Baeza, Alicia
Perez-Valero, Ignacio
Carvajal-Molina, Fernando
Bayon, Carmen
Montes-Ramirez, Marisa
Ignacio Bernardino, Jose
Arribas, Jose R
Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title_full Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title_fullStr Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title_full_unstemmed Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title_short Facial emotional processing deficits in long-term HIV-suppressed patients
title_sort facial emotional processing deficits in long-term hiv-suppressed patients
topic Poster Sessions – Abstract P132
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25397414
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19664
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