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Subcortical Disorders

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3. Multiple sclerosis (MS) 4. HIV. 5. Neurotoxic ... Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Variable lesions in white matter and corpus callosum ... Multiple Sclerosis (MS) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Subcortical Disorders


1
Subcortical Disorders
  • Thomas G. Bowers, Ph.D.

2
Karen Quinland Case
3
Pathology Sample
Kinney, Korein, Panigraphy et al. (1994)
4
Karen Quinland
  • Pathology sample indicated prominent subcortical
    damage
  • Especially in the thalamus
  • However, there is also evidence of considerable
    cortical damage
  • 835 grams

5
Anthony Bland Case
  • At age 18 suffered cerebral anoxia secondary to
    crushing injuries.
  • Brain weighed 1007 grams (average 1300 grams).
  • Narrowed gyri, cerebral atrophy

6
AB Pathology Sample
Jarmulowicz (1995), Catholic Medical Quarterly
7
AB Pathology Sample
8
Cingulate Gyrus
Mamimilary Bodies
Fornix
Anterior Thalamus
Hypothalamus
Hippocampus
The Circuit of Papez An Early Model of Neural
Substrates of Emotion
9
White Matter in Cognition
  • Three types of white matter fibers
  • 1. Association fibers
  • Connect different regions
  • 2. Commissural fibers
  • Connect corresponding hemispheres
  • 3. Projection fibers
  • Up-down

10
White Matter Changes in Aging
  • Leukoaraisosis
  • No mass effect, does not enhance
  • Periventricular sources
  • Glio cell loss
  • Small vessel infarct
  • Arteriosclerosis
  • Infection/inflammation
  • Demyelination
  • Vasculitides

11
MRI Characteristics
  • Patchy, diffuse hyperdensity
  • Pencil thin lines

12
Cognitive Characteristics
  • Attentional processes
  • Working memory (not span)
  • Encoding and retrieval
  • Spatial rotation
  • Discourse comprehension

13
Disease Processes
  • 1. Infection and autoimmune disorders
  • 2. Vasculitis
  • 3. Multiple sclerosis (MS)
  • 4. HIV
  • 5. Neurotoxic
  • 6. Gliomas

14
Infection and Autoimmune
  • Systemic lupus
  • 1. cognitive impairment fluctuates
  • 2. Can appear manic
  • 3. Deficits in retrieval, delayed recall
  • 4. Problems in cognitive speed and flexibility
  • Vasculitis
  • Inflammation of blood vessels

15
Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
  • Variable lesions in white matter and corpus
    callosum
  • Many different clinical courses
  • Periventricular changes
  • Very impaired on divided attention tasks

16
Multiple Sclerosis (MS)
  • Problems in reading comprehension, visual memory
    retrieval, verbal memory, motor slowing
  • Executive dysfunction
  • Negative recency effect noted
  • Possible loss of temporal codes
  • Do well on STM tasks

17
HIV
  • Patchy white matter changes
  • Atrophy in later stages
  • Prodromal stage (up to 2 years)
  • May be only mildly symptomatic
  • Attention deficits
  • Memory deficits
  • Slowed processing
  • Impaired conceptual processing
  • Impaired self monitoring

18
Neurotoxic Injury
  • Solvents
  • Acute and late developing effects
  • Headaches, dizziness, mild depression, impaired
    behavioral control
  • Problems in attention, self-monitoring
  • Chronic CO exposure

19
Gliomas
  • Astrocytomas (glioblastoma multiforme)

20
Ischemic Vascular Dementia
  • Leukencephalopathy
  • 1. Arteriosclerosis
  • 2. Spasm
  • 3. Transitant ischemia
  • Severity related to brain tissue loss
  • 1. decreased processing efficiency
  • 2. retrieval failures
  • 3. problems with semantic access
  • 4. spatial rotation impairment
  • 5. selective executive dysfunction

21
Progressive gliosis
  • Also progressive subcortical gliosis
  • Often may cause frontal problems

22
Frontal Lobe Dementia
  • Changes in eating habits
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Somatic complaints
  • Mute, empty behaviors
  • Not amnesic, but fail to use memory

23
Diffuse Axonal Injury
  • Acceleration/deceleration rotational forces
  • Yields shearing
  • Mechanical forces lead to neuronal segmentation,
    small hemorrhages, edema

24
Diffuse Axonal Injury
  • Povlishock work
  • Shearing due to axonal swelling, not mechanical
    tearing
  • Wallerian degeneration ensues
  • Evolves in 6-24 hours
  • Affects more distal axons
  • No disruption of myelin, of cell
  • retraction ball forms

25
Radiation Injury to Brain
  • Acute effects
  • Edema, elevated ICP
  • Early delayed effects, inhibition f myelin
    synthesis
  • Late delayed effects, damage to myelin, vascular
    damage, immune processes
  • Nausea, headache, drowsiness, anorexia
  • Verbal semantic LTM retrieval problems
  • Memory/motor dysfunction

26
Radiation Injury to Brain
  • Dementia can occur and lead to death
  • More likely memory decline, gradual recovery

27
Summary
  • White matter difficulty yields problems in
    complex cognitive processing
  • Problems in processing speed
  • Difficulties with high cognitive demands
  • Problems with complex stimulus demands, as
    rotations
  • Problems with attentional monitoring
  • Impairment with multiple associations

28
Summary
  • Object recognition is unimpaired, knowledge in
    unimpaired
  • No single modality of input is impaired, but
    multiple input is impaired
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