1 / 12

G.A. Carlesimo, L. Serra, L. Fadda, A. Cherubini, M. Bozzali, C. Caltagirone

Bilateral damage to the mammillo-thalamic tract impairs recollection but not familiarity in the recognition process: A single case investigation. G.A. Carlesimo, L. Serra, L. Fadda, A. Cherubini, M. Bozzali, C. Caltagirone. Neuropsychologia 45 (2007) 2467-2479 Presentation by Adam Bregman.

tuvya
Download Presentation

G.A. Carlesimo, L. Serra, L. Fadda, A. Cherubini, M. Bozzali, C. Caltagirone

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bilateral damage to the mammillo-thalamic tract impairs recollection but not familiarity in the recognition process: A single case investigation G.A. Carlesimo, L. Serra, L. Fadda, A. Cherubini, M. Bozzali, C. Caltagirone Neuropsychologia 45 (2007) 2467-2479 Presentation by Adam Bregman

  2. Who is this person? • G.P. is a 38 year old right handed man. • He was a lawyer with a prominent company in Italy

  3. What went wrong? • While walking, fell unconscious in February 2001. • Was taken to the hospital where he regained consciousness a few hours later with anterograde and retrograde amnesia. • A few days later he had enduring problems with anterograde LTM

  4. Neuroanatomy Background Info • MTL injuries- poor episodic memory with either recall or recognition. Show normal scores on STM, semantic, procedural memory. • Caused by thalamic lesions which is from disconnection between MTL structures and anterior thalamus

  5. Background continued • Mammillo-thalamic tract: connects hippocampus of MTL to mamillary bodies and the medial and lateral nuclei of mamillary bodies to anterior thalamic nuclei, which project to limbic cortical areas such as cingulate cortex. • VAF pathway: intrathalamic portion of pathway from amygdala and perirhinal cortex to MD thalamus.

  6. Diagram of mammillo-thalamic tract

  7. Clinical Connections • Claim that some structures in MTL involved in only recall of recent episodic memory, others in recognition • Recognition: evidence that perirhinal cortex in parahippocampal gyrus impt. Receives input from all sensory areas of brain and is important in recgonition of episodic memory • Recall: Hippocampus receives cortical inputs from parahippocampal gyrus and then projects to cortical and subcortical regions. • Aggleton and Brown (1999): damage to MTT and anterior thalamus cause severe and selective damage to recall • Damage to MD to thalamus or VAF, problems to recognition

  8. What’s the Nature of the damage • Bilateral thalamic damage. • MRI showed two ischemic lesions in anterior medial thalamus. • Lesion volumes were 316 and 217mL on right, and 57 and 22mL on left for two different scans. • Right thalamic lesion involved MTT • Left thalamic lesion involved MTT and ventral anterior thalamic nucleus. • MD nucleus spared

  9. MRI of Ischemic Lesions

  10. Aspects of memory impaired • Battery of neuropsychological tests all normal with exception of recognition tests compared to age matched controls • Problems with block design and object assembly and object decision subtest. • Normal STM, immediate memory intact but delayed episodic is poor • WAIS IQ=110 • WAIS verbal subtest=133 • Overall: impaired declarative episodic memory for verbal and visuo-spatial material. Normal recognition on two choice tests, but poor on yes/no and multiple choice tests. Preserved recognition.

  11. Discussion and Implications • Visuo-spatial problems could be due to larger damage to right hemisphere. • MD nucleus spared, which is important in recognition • Only damage to MTT, so only problems with recall. • Hippocampus only: problems with recall • Hippocampus and parahippocampal gyrus: recall and recognition problems

More Related