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Behavioral profiles in frontal lobe epilepsy: Autobiographic memory versus mood impairment
Author(s) -
Rayner Genevieve,
Jackson Graeme D.,
Wilson Sarah J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
epilepsia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.687
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1528-1167
pISSN - 0013-9580
DOI - 10.1111/epi.12902
Subject(s) - psychology , frontal lobe , semantic memory , autobiographical memory , temporal lobe , episodic memory , cognition , mood , epilepsy , cognitive psychology , audiology , neuroscience , psychiatry , medicine
Summary Objectives Autobiographic memory encompasses the encoding and retrieval of episodes, people, and places encountered in everyday life. It can be impaired in both epilepsy and frontal lobe damage. Here, we performed an initial investigation of how autobiographic memory is impacted by chronic frontal lobe epilepsy ( FLE ) together with its underlying pathology. Method We prospectively studied a series of nine consecutive patients with medically refractory FLE , relative to 24 matched healthy controls. Seven of the nine patients had frontal lobe structural abnormalities. Episodic and semantic autobiographic memory functioning was profiled, and factors associated with impaired autobiographic memory were identified among epileptologic, neuroimaging, neuropsychiatric, and cognitive variables including auditory‐verbal and visual memory, and the executive function of cognitive control. Results Results showed that the FLE group experienced significantly higher rates of autobiographic memory and mood disturbance (p < 0.001), with detailed assessment of individual patients revealing two profiles of impairment, primarily characterized by cognitive or mood disturbance. Five of the patients (56%) exhibited significant episodic autobiographic memory deficits, whereas in three of these, knowledge of semantic autobiographic facts was preserved. Four of them also had reduced cognitive control. Mood disorder was largely unrelated to poor autobiographic memory. In contrast, the four cases with preserved autobiographic memory were notable for their past or current depressive symptoms. Significance These findings provide preliminary data that frontal lobe seizure activity with its underlying pathology may selectively disrupt large‐scale cognitive or affective networks, giving rise to different neurobehavioral profiles that may be used to inform clinical management.

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