Neck and mind: exploring emotion processing in cervical dystonia
Federico Carbone, Marina Peball, Philipp Ellmerer, Beatrice Heim, Wolfgang Nachbauer, Elisabetta Indelicato, Matthias Amprosi, Philipp Mahlknecht, Anna Hussl, Anna Hotter, Roberta Granata, Klaus Seppi, Atbin Djamshidian, Sylvia Boesch

TL;DR
This study found that people with cervical dystonia have trouble recognizing emotions and are more likely to experience alexithymia compared to healthy individuals.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate emotion recognition and alexithymia in cervical dystonia patients using eye-tracking and validated psychological scales.
Findings
CD patients recognized emotions less accurately than healthy controls, especially fear and surprise.
CD patients had higher alexithymia scores and different gaze patterns during emotion recognition tasks.
Abstract
A wide range of non-motor symptoms such as pain, mood disorders, insomnia, and executive dysfunction may occur in focal dystonia. Little is known, however, about emotional processing. We aim to assess emotion recognition and alexithymia in patients with cervical dystonia (CD) compared to healthy age-, sex- and education-matched controls (HC). Emotion processing was assessed with an eye-tracking paradigm using a validated dataset of facial expressions and the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20). Dystonia severity and disability, cognition, and comorbid depression and anxiety were also assessed. We recruited 35 CD patients and 17 matched HC. In the eye-tracking task, CD patients recognized emotions less accurately than HCs (77.0% vs. 84.4%; p = 0.001), primarily based on difficulties in identification of fear (p = 0.003) and surprise (p = 0.037). Moreover, patients had longer fixations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBotulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders · Neurological disorders and treatments · Pain Management and Placebo Effect
