The role of hand preference in cognition and neuropsychiatric symptoms in neurodegenerative diseases
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ABSTRACT: Abstract Handedness has been shown to be associated with genetic variation involving brain development and neuropsychiatric diseases. Whether handedness plays a role in clinical phenotypes of common neurodegenerative diseases has not been extensively studied. This study used the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center database to examine whether self-reported handedness was associated with neuropsychological performance and neuropsychiatric symptoms in cognitively unimpaired individuals (n = 17 670), individuals with Alzheimer’s disease (n = 10 709), behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (n = 1132) or dementia with Lewy bodies (n = 637). Of the sample, 8% were left-handed, and 2% were ambidextrous. There were small differences in the handedness distributions across the cognitively unimpaired, Alzheimer’s disease, behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and dementia with Lewy bodies groups (7.2–9.5% left-handed and 0.9–2.2% ambidextrous). After adjusting for age, gender and education, we found faster performance in Trail Making Test A in cognitively unimpaired non-right-handers (ambidextrous and left-handed) compared with right-handers. Excluding ambidextrous individuals, the left-handed cognitively unimpaired individuals had faster Trail Making Test A performance and better Number Span Forward performance than right-handers. Overall, handedness had no effects on most neuropsychological tests and none on neuropsychiatric symptoms. Handedness effect on Trail Making Test A in the cognitively unimpaired is likely to stem from test artefacts rather than a robust difference in cognitive performance. In conclusion, handedness does not appear to affect neuropsychological performance or neuropsychiatric symptoms in common neurodegenerative diseases. Saari and Vuoksimaa investigate whether hand preference associates with cognitive test performance or neuropsychiatric symptoms in Alzheimer’s disease, behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies or normal cognitive aging using a large data set. The researchers find no robust handedness-related differences in cognitive performance or neuropsychiatric symptoms in any groups. See McManus (https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcad162) for a scientific commentary on this article. Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract
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PROVIDER: S-EPMC10231800 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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