TY - JOUR
T1 - A diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological study of prospective memory impairment in South African HIV positive individuals
AU - Jacqueline, Hoare
AU - Jenny, Westgarth Taylor
AU - Jean-Paul, Fouche
AU - Bruce, Spottiswoode
AU - Robert, Paul
AU - Kevin, Thomas
AU - Dan, Stein
AU - John, Joska
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments JH-has received support from the Biological Psychiatry special interest group of the South Africa Society of Psychiatrists, and the Discovery Foundation Academic Award of South Africa JJ-has received support from the National Research Foundation (NRF), the Biological Psychiatry special interest group of the South Africa Society of Psychiatrists, the Medical Research Foundation of South Africa (MRC) and the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Committee, University of Cape Town. DS-is supported by the NRF and MRC.
PY - 2012/9
Y1 - 2012/9
N2 - HIV-associated prospective memory (ProM) impairment has emerged, in earlier studies as a significant predictor of medication management and independence in activities of daily living. The relationship between ProM and white matter integrity in HIV has not previously been investigated. Participants, including 128 HIV-infected individuals and 32 healthy controls, were assessed using a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation and both objective and subjective measures of ProM. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was utilized to investigate the relationship of white matter integrity to ProM in a randomly selected subsample of 40 HIV positive subjects, using a whole brain voxel-based approach to define fractional anisotrophy (FA) and mean diffusion (MD). Total prospective memory was significantly poorer in the HIV positive group when compared with healthy controls (p00.023). Timebased ProM was poorer in the HIV group compared to healthy controls both without prompts (p00.001) and with prompts (p00.001). Poor Total ProM score correlated with performance on neuropsychological tests of executive functioning, information processing speed, learning, and working memory (p<0.05). Those HIV positive participants with poor ProM had significantly decreased FA in the regions of superior corona radiata (p00.0035), the corpus collosum (p00.006) and the cingulum (p00.0033) when compared to those who were HIV positive with good ProM. This study reinforces the importance of ProM assessment in HIV.
AB - HIV-associated prospective memory (ProM) impairment has emerged, in earlier studies as a significant predictor of medication management and independence in activities of daily living. The relationship between ProM and white matter integrity in HIV has not previously been investigated. Participants, including 128 HIV-infected individuals and 32 healthy controls, were assessed using a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation and both objective and subjective measures of ProM. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was utilized to investigate the relationship of white matter integrity to ProM in a randomly selected subsample of 40 HIV positive subjects, using a whole brain voxel-based approach to define fractional anisotrophy (FA) and mean diffusion (MD). Total prospective memory was significantly poorer in the HIV positive group when compared with healthy controls (p00.023). Timebased ProM was poorer in the HIV group compared to healthy controls both without prompts (p00.001) and with prompts (p00.001). Poor Total ProM score correlated with performance on neuropsychological tests of executive functioning, information processing speed, learning, and working memory (p<0.05). Those HIV positive participants with poor ProM had significantly decreased FA in the regions of superior corona radiata (p00.0035), the corpus collosum (p00.006) and the cingulum (p00.0033) when compared to those who were HIV positive with good ProM. This study reinforces the importance of ProM assessment in HIV.
KW - Dementia
KW - Executive function
KW - HIV/Aids
KW - Learning and memory
KW - Mild cognitive impairment
KW - Neuroimaging (functional)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84864453554&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11011-012-9311-0
DO - 10.1007/s11011-012-9311-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 22569999
AN - SCOPUS:84864453554
SN - 0885-7490
VL - 27
SP - 289
EP - 297
JO - Metabolic Brain Disease
JF - Metabolic Brain Disease
IS - 3
ER -