Abstract

The authors investigated for presence of cognitive impairment after occurrence of bilateral lesions of the genu of the internal capsule (GIC). Clinical and neuropsychological features of unilateral GIC lesions have previously been studied, but the cognitive profile of bilateral lesions of the GIC has not been fully explored. An investigation was conducted of neurocognitive deficits and computerized tomography MRI findings among 4,200 stroke patients with bilateral GIC involvement who were admitted to the hospital between January 2010 and October 2018. Eight patients with bilateral lesions of the capsular genu were identified and their data analyzed. Overall, behavioral and cognitive dysfunction were characterized by impairment of frontal, memory, and executive functions. Attention and abstraction were present among all eight patients (100%); apathy, abulia, and executive dysfunctions, among seven (87.5%); global mental dysfunction and planning deficits, among six (75.0%); short-term verbal memory deficits and language dysfunctions, among five (62.5%); long-term verbal memory deficits, among four (50.0%); and spatial memory deficits, reading, writing, counting dysfunctions, and anarthria, among two (25.0%). Four of the patients (50.0%) without a history of cognitive disorder showed severe mental deterioration compatible with the clinical picture of dementia. A clinical picture of dementia was still present in these patients 6 months after stroke. Bilateral lesions of the capsular genu appearing either simultaneously or at different times were significantly associated with executive dysfunctions.

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