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Time Processing in Huntington's Disease: A Group-Control Study.Christian Beste, Carson Saft, Jürgen Andrich, Thomas Müller, Ralf Gold R, and Michael Falkenstein Background “Timing” processes are mediated via a disturbed neuronal network including the basal ganglia. Brain structures important for “timing” are also discussed to be critical for the deterioration of movements in Huntington's disease (HD). Changes in “timing processes” are found in HD, but no study has varied the degree of motor demands in timing functions in parallel in HD. It may be hypothesized that timing functions may be deteriorated to a different extent in motor and non-motor timing, because in motor timing the underlying brain structures may be more demanding than in non-motor timing. Methodology/Principle Findings We assessed timing in two different experiments: a time-estimation (TE) and a time-discrimination (TD) task. The demand on motor functions is high in the TE-task and low in the TD-task. Furthermore, general motor ability was assessed at different complexity levels. A presymptomatic (pHD), a symptomatic (HD) and a control group were investigated. We found a decline in timing functions when demands on the motor system were high (TE-task), in HD and even in pHD, compared to controls. In non-motor timing (TD task) and in the assessment of general motor ability, performance in the pHD-group was comparable to the controls and better than in the symptomatic group. Performance in both timing tasks was related to the duration until the estimated age of onset in pHDs. Conclusions/Significance The study shows a selective deterioration of time-estimation processes in symptomatic and even presymptomatic Huntington's disease. Time-discrimination processes were not affected in both patient groups. The relation of timing performance to the duration until the estimated age of onset in pHD is of clinical importance. Source: PLoS ONE 2(12) 2007: e1263.
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Articles discussing CAG mutation in HD
Research related to Juvenile HD
Articles that discuss strategies for living with Huntington's Disease.
Research on factors influencing the age of onset
15 Jan 2007
Striosome Damage Indicted in HD Mood Disorders
Pronounced mood dysfunction in HD is associated with damage to the GAMA alpha receptors (the connection between neurons and target tissue)in the striosomes compartment of the brain's striatum. Since 26 Dec 2006
Psychiatric Disorders in Pre-Clinical Huntington's disease
Depression and irritability precede clinical onset. 21 Aug 2006
Adult Onset HD with Dystonia
One in eight adults have dystonia rather than chorea as their predominant movement disorder. 16 Jul 2006
Probability of Obsessive and Compulsive Symptoms in Huntington's Disease
Osessions and compulsions become more likely as the disease progresses but are not an inevitable part of the disease. 6 Nov 2004
Why people with HD sleep more
Huntington's Disease causes the same kind of cell death in the hypothalamus that is found in narcolepsy. This explains the excessive sleeping of people with Huntington's Disease. ... All Updates for Symptoms of HD |
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