Very early brain damage leads to remodeling of the working memory system in adulthood: A combined fMRI/ Tractography study
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2015
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Society for Neuroscience
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Froudist Walsh S., Karolis V., Caldinelli C., Brittain P.J., Kroll J., Rodríguez Toscano E., Tesse M., Colquhoun M., Howes O., Dell'Acqua F., Thiebaut de Schotten M., Murray R.M., Williams S.C. & Nosarti C.(2015). Very Early Brain Damage Leads to Remodeling of the Working Memory System in Adulthood: A Combined fMRI/Tractography Study. The Journal of Neuroscience, 35(48):15787-15799 99.
Abstract
The human brain can adapt to overcome injury even years after an initial insult. One hypothesis states that early brain injury survivors,
by taking advantage of critical periods of high plasticity during childhood, should recover more successfully than those who suffer injury
later in life. This hypothesis has been challenged by recent studies showing worse cognitive outcome in individuals with early brain injury,
compared with individuals with later brain injury, with working memory particularly affected. We invited individuals who suffered
perinatal brain injury (PBI) for an fMRI/diffusion MRI tractography study of working memory and hypothesized that, 30 years after the
initial injury, working memory deficits in the PBI group would remain, despite compensatory activation in areas outside the typical
working memory network. Furthermore we hypothesized that the amount of functional reorganization would be related to the level of
injury to the dorsal cingulum tract, which connects medial frontal and parietal working memory structures. We found that adults who
suffered PBI did not significantly differ from controls in working memory performance. They exhibited less activation in classic frontoparietal
working memory areas and a relative overactivation of bilateral perisylvian cortex compared with controls. Structurally, the
dorsal cingulum volume and hindrance-modulated orientational anisotropy was significantly reduced in the PBI group. Furthermore
there was uniquely in the PBI group a significant negative correlation between the volume of this tract and activation in the bilateral
perisylvian cortex and a positive correlation between this activation and task performance. This provides the first evidence of compensatory
plasticity of the working memory network following PBI.