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Experimental neurology · May 2012
Altered ventral striatal activation during reward and punishment processing in premanifest Huntington's disease: a functional magnetic resonance study.
- Björn Enzi, Marc-Andreas Edel, Silke Lissek, Sören Peters, Rainer Hoffmann, Volkmar Nicolas, Martin Tegenthoff, Georg Juckel, and Carsten Saft.
- Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Preventive Medicine, LWL-University Hospital Bochum, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany. Bjoern.Enzi@wkp-lwl.org
- Exp. Neurol. 2012 May 1;235(1):256-64.
AbstractRecent research using various neuroimaging methods revealed the crucial role of the striatum concerning the neuropathology of Huntington's disease. Degenerative changes located in the basal ganglia are already observable in premanifest stages of Huntington's disease (pre-HD), i.e., before the onset of manifest motor symptoms. Although the impact of the striatum on reward and punishment processing is well-established in healthy subjects, these processes have not been investigated in manifest and premanifest HD subjects using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) so far. We used the Monetary Incentive Delay Task to investigate valence discrimination in terms of rewarding and punishing cues in 30 pre-HD and 15 healthy subjects. According to the probability of disease onset within the next 5 years, pre-HD subjects were categorized as either near to motor symptom onset (pre-HD(near); 9.9 [±2.91] years to onset) or far from manifest disease onset (pre-HD(far); 23.49 [±5.99] years to onset). Compared to pre-HD(far) and healthy subjects, pre-HD(near) subjects showed a disturbed neuronal differentiation between reward and control anticipation located in the left ventral striatum. In contrast to pre-HD(far) and healthy subjects, no significant ventral striatal discrimination between punishing and control cues was detected in pre-HD(near) subjects. In the present study, we demonstrated for the first time significant differences in valence discrimination in pre-HD(near) subjects compared to pre-HD(far) subjects and healthy controls. Altered reward and punishment processing could therefore reflect a motivational deficit that may contribute to the pathogenesis of Huntington's disease.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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