So close yet so far: executive contribution to memory processing in behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia
So close yet so far: executive contribution to memory processing in behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia
Background: Memory impairment in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is traditionally considered to be mild and attributed to prefrontal cortex dysfunction. Recent studies, however, indicated that some patients can present with a memory impairment of the hippocampal type, showing storage and consolidation deficits in addition to the more executive/prefrontal related encoding and strategic difficulties.
Objective: This study aimed to study the relationship between executive functions (EF) and memory processes in bvFTD via a data-driven approach.
Method: Participants consisted of 71 bvFTD (among which 60.6% had a lumbar puncture showing non-Alzheimer biomarker profile) and 60 controls (among which 45% had amyloid imaging showing a normal profile). EF were assessed by the Frontal Assessment Battery, semantic/lexical verbal fluency tests, and forward/backward digit spans. Patients were split into amnestic (n = 33) and non-amnestic (n = 38) subgroups based on normative data (total recall score) from the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT). Relationships between FCSRT subscores and EF measures were explored through hierarchical clustering analysis, partial correlation analysis with an EF component, and automated linear modeling.
Results: Convergent findings across the statistical approaches show that, overall, memory performance was independent from EF in bvFTD whereas the relationship was stronger in controls. Indeed, in bvFTD, memory performance did not cluster with EF, was not correlated with the EF component, and was only partially (4% – 12.7%) predicted by EF.
Discussion: These findings show that executive dysfunctions cannot solely explain the memory deficits occurring in bvFTD. Indeed, some patients present with a genuine amnesia affecting storage and consolidation abilities, which are independent from executive dysfunctions. On the clinical level, this study highlights the importance of revising the neuropsychological diagnosis criteria for bvFTD.
1005 - 1014
Bertoux, M
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Ramanan, S
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Slachevsky, A
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Wong, S
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Henriquez, F
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Musa, G
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Delgado, C
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Flanagan, E
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Bottlaender, M
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Sarazin, M
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Hornberger, M
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Dubois, B
0e3c0bf6-fe09-4cee-99e5-3a67bcd7f88a
4 October 2016
Bertoux, M
cd351b78-c9bc-4d36-9a29-cc365fe16c34
Ramanan, S
48210f47-9f55-441f-93c5-36b6fee8cc2e
Slachevsky, A
d3f101c3-39bc-484f-a367-e25ba6f5502f
Wong, S
af7580fc-d84c-4825-aa14-085a83d9cd0d
Henriquez, F
19ef66aa-6f10-41fe-a210-0353c8b4f72f
Musa, G
cee8b9cf-79d4-4bc3-9890-3192bfd0c8b2
Delgado, C
71a58e76-d0a0-457a-abfc-ffa1e755950b
Flanagan, E
954e7026-776b-4764-b6bb-3c98418c4a7c
Bottlaender, M
7ec76930-cf42-4f7b-8801-fbb3789eabed
Sarazin, M
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Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Dubois, B
0e3c0bf6-fe09-4cee-99e5-3a67bcd7f88a
Bertoux, M, Ramanan, S, Slachevsky, A, Wong, S, Henriquez, F, Musa, G, Delgado, C, Flanagan, E, Bottlaender, M, Sarazin, M, Hornberger, M and Dubois, B
(2016)
So close yet so far: executive contribution to memory processing in behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : JAD, 54 (3), .
(doi:10.3233/jad-160522).
Abstract
Background: Memory impairment in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is traditionally considered to be mild and attributed to prefrontal cortex dysfunction. Recent studies, however, indicated that some patients can present with a memory impairment of the hippocampal type, showing storage and consolidation deficits in addition to the more executive/prefrontal related encoding and strategic difficulties.
Objective: This study aimed to study the relationship between executive functions (EF) and memory processes in bvFTD via a data-driven approach.
Method: Participants consisted of 71 bvFTD (among which 60.6% had a lumbar puncture showing non-Alzheimer biomarker profile) and 60 controls (among which 45% had amyloid imaging showing a normal profile). EF were assessed by the Frontal Assessment Battery, semantic/lexical verbal fluency tests, and forward/backward digit spans. Patients were split into amnestic (n = 33) and non-amnestic (n = 38) subgroups based on normative data (total recall score) from the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT). Relationships between FCSRT subscores and EF measures were explored through hierarchical clustering analysis, partial correlation analysis with an EF component, and automated linear modeling.
Results: Convergent findings across the statistical approaches show that, overall, memory performance was independent from EF in bvFTD whereas the relationship was stronger in controls. Indeed, in bvFTD, memory performance did not cluster with EF, was not correlated with the EF component, and was only partially (4% – 12.7%) predicted by EF.
Discussion: These findings show that executive dysfunctions cannot solely explain the memory deficits occurring in bvFTD. Indeed, some patients present with a genuine amnesia affecting storage and consolidation abilities, which are independent from executive dysfunctions. On the clinical level, this study highlights the importance of revising the neuropsychological diagnosis criteria for bvFTD.
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bertoux-et-al-2016-so-close-yet-so-far-executive-contribution-to-memory-processing-in-behavioral-variant-frontotemporal
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e-pub ahead of print date: 18 August 2016
Published date: 4 October 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 505419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505419
PURE UUID: 2c1534a5-8077-4778-b4ce-8a3d37d17a1d
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Date deposited: 08 Oct 2025 16:32
Last modified: 09 Oct 2025 02:25
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Author:
M Bertoux
Author:
S Ramanan
Author:
A Slachevsky
Author:
S Wong
Author:
F Henriquez
Author:
G Musa
Author:
C Delgado
Author:
E Flanagan
Author:
M Bottlaender
Author:
M Sarazin
Author:
M Hornberger
Author:
B Dubois
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