Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience (Jul 2023)

Bulbar involvement and cognitive features in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a retrospective study on 347 patients

  • Edoardo Nicolò Aiello,
  • Federica Solca,
  • Silvia Torre,
  • Valerio Patisso,
  • Alberto De Lorenzo,
  • Mauro Treddenti,
  • Eleonora Colombo,
  • Alessio Maranzano,
  • Claudia Morelli,
  • Alberto Doretti,
  • Federico Verde,
  • Federico Verde,
  • Vincenzo Silani,
  • Vincenzo Silani,
  • Nicola Ticozzi,
  • Nicola Ticozzi,
  • Barbara Poletti,
  • Barbara Poletti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2023.1217080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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BackgroundThis study aimed at clarifying the role of bulbar involvement (BI) as a risk factor for cognitive impairment (CI) in non-demented amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients.MethodsData on N = 347 patients were retrospectively collected. Cognition was assessed via the Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioral ALS Screen (ECAS). On the basis of clinical records and ALS Functional Rating Scale-Revised (ALSFRS-R) scores, BI was characterized as follows: (1) BI at onset—from medical history; (2) BI at testing (an ALSFRS-R-Bulbar score ≤11); (3) dysarthria (a score ≤3 on item 1 of the ALSFRS-R); (4) severity of BI (the total score on the ALSFRS-R-Bulbar); and (5) progression rate of BI (computed as 12-ALSFRS-R-Bulbar/disease duration in months). Logistic regressions were run to predict a below- vs. above-cutoff performance on each ECAS measure based on BI-related features while accounting for sex, disease duration, severity and progression rate of respiratory and spinal involvement and ECAS response modality.ResultsNo predictors yielded significance either on the ECAS-Total and -ALS-non-specific or on ECAS-Language/-Fluency or -Visuospatial subscales. BI at testing predicted a higher probability of an abnormal performance on the ECAS-ALS-specific (p = 0.035) and ECAS-Executive Functioning (p = 0.018). Lower ALSFRS-R-Bulbar scores were associated with a defective performance on the ECAS-Memory (p = 0.025). No other BI-related features affected other ECAS performances.DiscussionIn ALS, the occurrence of BI itself, while neither its specific features nor its presence at onset, might selectively represent a risk factor for executive impairment, whilst its severity might be associated with memory deficits.

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