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Parkinson's disease is characterized not only by motor symptoms but also by psycho-behavioral symptoms including Visual Hallucinations (VH) and illusions (I), that are generally associated with a severe functional impairment and a bad prognosis for patients. Visual Hallucinations are defined by a visual perception without any real objet to perceive, whereas illusions are defined by a wrong perceptions of an object that is really present. In most of studies investigating the pathophysiology of VH in PD, no difference is made between VH and I, however different mechanisms could lead to the emergence of these two phenomenon, with different prognosis.
Investigator hypothesize that illusions could be related to a visual impairment, maybe at the retinal level, known to be impaired in PD, whereas Visual hallucinations would be due to a more widespread impairment affecting higher levels visuo-perceptive and cognitive functions.
Full description
Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by tremor, rigidity and akinesia, but patients can also present various non-motor symptoms in the course of their illness, including visual hallucinations, delusions or illusions. Visual Hallucinations are false perceptions (no external stimulus is present; generally caused by internal stimulations), whereas illusions are defined by a wrong perception (an external stimulus is always present). Delusions are false believes .The occurrence of hallucinations in PD is of major importance as it has been shown to be associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment and could lead to nursing home placement and to increased mortality. It is generally believed that delusions/illusions also imply a bad prognosis with time . However recent data suggest that delusions/illusion are not associated with such a poor outcome regarding cognitive functions and mortality compared to hallucinations suggesting different pathological mechanisms and anatomical substrates . Also, a recent study analyzing the neuropsychological correlates of minor hallucinations in PD did not find executive dysfunction to contribute to the onset of minor psychotic phenomena, but was specifically implicated in the progression to well-structured VH.
Thus illusions and minorVH may have a different pathogenesis and a different prognosis compared to complex VH, however studies exploring the structural and functional changes associated with hallucinations in PD have mainly included patients with well-structured VH and moderate to severe cognitive impairment , making it difficult to define early abnormalities associated with minor hallucinations or illusions.
Several hypotheses are proposed regarding the emergence of hallucinations in PD.
Thus, the emergence of VH and illusions in PD could be due to an inbalance between a hypoactivated "bottom-up" (due to retino-striato-occipital hypoactivation) and a deshinibited "top-down" (mainly frontal) visual stream. However in all these studies, Hallucinations and illusions were not specifically discriminated and investigated in spite of the fact that they could be subtended by different pathophysiological mechanisms and might imply different prognosis for the evolution of the disease.
Investigator hypothesize that illusions, which represent the failure to successfully integrate stimuli that have been physically presented, could be more related to "bottom up" impairment, unlike Hallucinations, which occur where there is perception in the absence of any stimulus and could be more related to a "top down" impairment. Thus, PD patients with illusions (PD-I) might present greater retinal degeneration measured by OCT compared to PD patients with Visual hallucinations (PD-VH) and PD patients without Hallucinations or illusion (PD-nVHI), suggesting a sensorial deprivation underlying these disturbed visual perceptions of reality. Visual Hallucinations that are more elaborated would require a more widespread cognitive disorder, with increased cognitive and visuoperceptive dysfunction.
OBJECTIVE In this study investigator aim to compare PD patients with visual hallucinations (PD-VH), with illusions (PD-I), without Visual hallucinations or illusions (PD-nVHI) regarding retinal degeneration in OCT and cognitive functions (visuoperceptive and attentional functions) in order to determine whether PD-I might show greater retinal degeneration compared to PD-VH, and lesser cognitive impairment.
DESIGN OF STUDY:
Investigator will include 30 PD-VH+, 30 PD-I+, 30 PD-VH-I- among the patients consulting at our center.
During the first visit (Baseline, inclusion visit, 2 hours), each subject will perform a clinical and neurological examination with : • Diagnosis of PD according to UKPDBB criteria.
• The presence of Visual Hallucinations or Illusions will be characterized according to the Psychosensory Hallucination Scale. Illusions will be defined by answering "Yes" to at least one of the "elementary items".
During the second visit (Day 15, one day), each patient will have a neurological, neuropsychological and ophthalmological examination with an evaluation of
Circumstances of emergence and distress caused by Hallucinations/illusions was also evaluated by measurement of heart rate variability, electrodermal recording, spy glasses and self-evaluation of Stress.
Finally, each subject will have a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) acquisition.
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90 participants in 3 patient groups
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Lise LACLAUTRE
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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