1. Cognitive dysfunction associated with aluminum hydroxide-induced macrophagic myofasciitis: A reappraisal of neuropsychological profile.
- Author
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Aoun Sebaiti M, Kauv P, Charles-Nelson A, Van Der Gucht A, Blanc-Durand P, Itti E, Gherardi RK, Bachoud-Levi AC, and Authier FJ
- Subjects
- Asymptomatic Diseases, Attention drug effects, Cohort Studies, Diagnosis, Differential, Dichotic Listening Tests, Executive Function drug effects, Fasciitis chemically induced, Fasciitis diagnosis, Fasciitis diagnostic imaging, Female, France, Hospitals, Special, Hospitals, University, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Episodic, Myositis chemically induced, Myositis diagnosis, Myositis diagnostic imaging, Neuroimaging, Neuropsychological Tests, Neurotoxicity Syndromes diagnosis, Neurotoxicity Syndromes diagnostic imaging, Retrospective Studies, Verbal Behavior drug effects, Adjuvants, Immunologic adverse effects, Aluminum Hydroxide adverse effects, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Fasciitis physiopathology, Myositis physiopathology, Neurotoxicity Syndromes physiopathology
- Abstract
Patients with macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) present with diffuse arthromyalgias, chronic fatigue, and cognitive disorder. Representative features of MMF-associated cognitive dysfunction include attentional dysfunction, dysexecutive syndrome, visual memory deficit and left ear extinction. Our study aims to reevaluate the neuropsychological profile of MMF. 105 unselected consecutive MMF patients were subjected to a neuropsychological battery of screen short term and long-term memory, executive functions, attentional abilities, instrumental functions and dichotic listening. From these results, patients were classified in four different groups: Subsymptomatic patients (n=41) with performance above pathological threshold (-1.65 SD) in all tests; Fronto-subcortical patients (n=31) who showed pathological results at executive functions and selective attention tests; Papezian patients (n=24) who showed pathological results in storage, recognition and consolidation functions for episodic verbal memory, in addition to fronto-subcortical dysfunction; and Extinction patients (n=9) who had a left ear extinction at dichotic listening test in association to fronto-subcortical and papezian dysfunction. In addition, inter-test analysis showed that patients with apparently normal cognitive functions (Subsymptomatic group) performed significantly worse to attention tests compared to others. In conclusion, our study shows that (i) most patients have specific cognitive deficits; (ii) all patients with cognitive deficit have impairment of executive functions and selective attention; (iii) patients without measurable cognitive deficits display significant weakness in attention; (iv) episodic memory impairment affects verbal, but not visual, memory; (v) none of the patients show an instrumental dysfunction., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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