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Increased illusory responses in non-hallucinating, cognitively impaired Lewy body disease patients

M. Shahid, A. Rawls, V. Ramirez, S. Ryman, V. Santini, L. Yang, S. Sha, J. Hall, T. Montine, L. Tian, B. Cholerton, V. Henderson, M. Yutsis, K. Poston (Stanford, CA, USA)

Meeting: MDS Virtual Congress 2020

Abstract Number: 859

Keywords: Hallucinations

Category: Parkinson's Disease: Psychiatric Manifestations

Objective: To determine whether non-hallucinating Lewy body disease-spectrum patients report increased illusory responses.

Background: Pareidolias are specific illusions of faces and objects perceived in formless visual stimuli[1]. Studies using a noise pareidolia task have shown that dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) patients report more illusory responses than Alzheimer’s disease patients, which correlates with severity of visual hallucinations[2]. However, it is unknown whether illusory responses occur in earlier stages of disease or in non-hallucinating patients across the Lewy body disease-spectrum, including PD without cognitive impairment (PD-noMCI) or PD with mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI) and dementia (PDD).

Method: We studied the NACC Noise Pareidolia Task (Lewy body disease Module[3]) in 300 participants from the Stanford ADRC and Pacific Udall Center after comprehensive motor and cognitive assessments with consensus diagnostic adjudication. The four diagnosis groups included 65 PD-noMCI, 38 Lewy body disease with cognitive impairment (PD-MCI/PDD/DLB), 51 Alzheimer’s disease-spectrum (MCI/AD), and 146 HC. We performed an ANOVA to determine the between group differences in illusory responses and a linear regression to determine whether diagnosis group, age, gender, or education predict illusory responses. We repeated analyses after removing participants with patient/caregiver reported hallucinations or delusions (MDS-UPDRS 1.2 and NPI).

Results: We found significantly more illusory responses in PD-MCI/PDD/DLB group compared to the PD-noMCI, MCI/AD, and HC groups [table 1]. In the regression analysis, diagnosis group was significantly associated with more illusory responses (β[CI]; 0.307 [0.185-0.407]); by contrast, age, gender, and education were not associated with illusory responses [table 2]. After removing participants with reported hallucinations or delusions, we still found more illusory responses in the PD-MCI/PDD/DLB group compared to PD-noMCI, MCI/AD, and HC and in the regression analysis diagnosis group solely remained a significant predictor of illusory responses (0.283 [0.144-0.350]).

Conclusion: Across the Lewy body disease-spectrum, we found increased illusory responses in non-hallucinating patients with cognitive impairment compared to patients without cognitive impairment. Longitudinal studies are needed to determine whether increased illusory responses predict future hallucinations.

MDS 2020 Table 1

MDS 2020 Table 2

References: [1] The psychosis spectrum in Parkinson disease. Ffytche D, Creese B, Politis M, Chaudhuri K, Weintraub D, Ballard C, Aarsland D. Nat Rev Neurol. 2017 Feb; 13(2): 81–95. [2] Hallucinators find meaning in noises: pareidolic illusions in dementia with Lewy bodies. Yokoi K, Nishio Y, Uchiyama M, Shimomura T, Iizuka O, Mori E. Neuropsychologica. 2014 Apr; 56: 245-54. [3] https://www.alz.washington.edu/WEB/forms_lbd.html

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

M. Shahid, A. Rawls, V. Ramirez, S. Ryman, V. Santini, L. Yang, S. Sha, J. Hall, T. Montine, L. Tian, B. Cholerton, V. Henderson, M. Yutsis, K. Poston. Increased illusory responses in non-hallucinating, cognitively impaired Lewy body disease patients [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2020; 35 (suppl 1). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/increased-illusory-responses-in-non-hallucinating-cognitively-impaired-lewy-body-disease-patients/. Accessed June 15, 2025.
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