Abstract

SEE BIGLER DOI101093/AWW277 FOR A SCIENTIFIC COMMENTARY ON THIS ARTICLE: Post-traumatic amnesia is very common immediately after traumatic brain injury. It is characterized by a confused, agitated state and a pronounced inability to encode new memories and sustain attention. Clinically, post-traumatic amnesia is an important predictor of functional outcome. However, despite its prevalence and functional importance, the pathophysiology of post-traumatic amnesia is not understood. Memory processing relies on limbic structures such as the hippocampus, parahippocampus and parts of the cingulate cortex. These structures are connected within an intrinsic connectivity network, the default mode network. Interactions within the default mode network can be assessed using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging, which can be acquired in confused patients unable to perform tasks in the scanner. Here we used this approach to test the hypothesis that the mnemonic symptoms of post-traumatic amnesia are caused by functional disconnection within the default mode network. We assessed whether the hippocampus and parahippocampus showed evidence of transient disconnection from cortical brain regions involved in memory processing. Nineteen patients with traumatic brain injury were classified into post-traumatic amnesia and traumatic brain injury control groups, based on their performance on a paired associates learning task. Cognitive function was also assessed with a detailed neuropsychological test battery. Functional interactions between brain regions were investigated using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. Together with impairments in associative memory, patients in post-traumatic amnesia demonstrated impairments in information processing speed and spatial working memory. Patients in post-traumatic amnesia showed abnormal functional connectivity between the parahippocampal gyrus and posterior cingulate cortex. The strength of this functional connection correlated with both associative memory and information processing speed and normalized when these functions improved. We have previously shown abnormally high posterior cingulate cortex connectivity in the chronic phase after traumatic brain injury, and this abnormality was also observed in patients with post-traumatic amnesia. Patients with post-traumatic amnesia showed evidence of widespread traumatic axonal injury measured using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging. This change was more marked within the cingulum bundle, the tract connecting the parahippocampal gyrus to the posterior cingulate cortex. These findings provide novel insights into the pathophysiology of post-traumatic amnesia and evidence that memory impairment acutely after traumatic brain injury results from altered parahippocampal functional connectivity, perhaps secondary to the effects of axonal injury on white matter tracts connecting limbic structures involved in memory processing.

Highlights

  • Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) frequently follows traumatic brain injury (TBI) and is characterized by transient anterograde amnesia, confusion, disorientation and agitation (Marshman et al, 2013)

  • Our results show for the first time that PTA is associated with disruption to the structure and function of brain networks critical for memory formation

  • The posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) is the main hub of a network central to memory processing, the default mode network (DMN)

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Summary

Introduction

Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) frequently follows traumatic brain injury (TBI) and is characterized by transient anterograde amnesia, confusion, disorientation and agitation (Marshman et al, 2013). Previous studies have shown that PTA is sometimes associated with focal lesions and decreased cerebral perfusion, mainly in the frontal and temporal lobes (Lorberboym et al, 2002; Gowda et al, 2006; Metting et al, 2010). Some studies have reported that the extent of perfusion changes predicts the severity of PTA (Lorberboym et al, 2002; Metting et al, 2010). PTA can be seen in patients without focal lesions and can occur in cases of mild TBI in the absence of any overt structural abnormalities (Metting et al, 2010). The lack of a clear relationship with obvious structural injury and its transient nature suggests that PTA results from a temporary disruption in the interactions of brain regions involved in memory processing

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