Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine MC5723, 401 Quarry Road, Stanford, CA, 94305-5723, USA.
Brain Struct Funct. 2013 May;218(3):683-95. doi: 10.1007/s00429-012-0421-6. Epub 2012 May 15.
Chronic alcoholism is known to disrupt functions served by distributed brain systems, including limbic and frontocerebellar circuits involved in resting-state and task-activated networks subserving component processes of memory often affected in alcoholics. Using an fMRI paradigm, we investigated whether memory performance by alcoholics on a face-name association test previously observed to be problematic for alcoholics could be explained by desynchronous activity between nodes of these specific networks. While in the scanner, 18 alcoholics and 15 controls performed a face-name associative learning task with different levels of processing at encoding. This task was designed to activate the hippocampus, cerebellum, and frontal cortex. Alcoholics and controls were also scanned at rest. Twelve alcoholics and 12 controls were selected to be matched on face-name recognition performance. Task-related fMRI analysis indicated that alcoholics had preserved limbic activation but lower cerebellar activation (Crus II) than the controls in the face-name learning task. Crus II was, therefore, chosen as a seed for functional connectivity MRI analysis. At rest, the left hippocampus and left Crus II had positively synchronized activity in controls, while hippocampal and cerebellar activities were negatively synchronized in alcoholics. Task engagement resulted in hippocampal-cerebellar desynchronization in both groups. We speculate that atypical cerebello-hippocampal activity synchronization during rest in alcoholics was reset to the normal pattern of asynchrony by task engagement. Aberrations from the normal pattern of resting-state default mode synchrony could be interpreted as enabling preserved face-name associative memory in alcoholism.
慢性酒精中毒已知会破坏分布式大脑系统的功能,包括边缘系统和额 cerebellar 回路,这些回路参与静息状态和任务激活网络,为记忆的组成过程提供服务,而这些过程通常在酒精中毒者中受到影响。使用 fMRI 范式,我们研究了酒精中毒者在面孔-名字联想测试中的记忆表现是否可以通过这些特定网络节点之间的去同步活动来解释,该测试先前被观察到对酒精中毒者有问题。在扫描仪中,18 名酒精中毒者和 15 名对照者在编码时进行了不同程度处理的面孔-名字联想学习任务。该任务旨在激活海马体、小脑和额叶皮层。酒精中毒者和对照组也在休息时进行了扫描。选择 12 名酒精中毒者和 12 名对照者,以匹配面孔-名字识别性能。任务相关的 fMRI 分析表明,在面孔-名字学习任务中,酒精中毒者的边缘系统激活得到保留,但小脑激活(Crus II)低于对照组。因此,Crus II 被选为功能连接 MRI 分析的种子。在休息时,对照组的左侧海马体和左侧 Crus II 具有正同步活动,而酒精中毒者的海马体和小脑活动呈负同步。任务参与导致两组海马体-小脑去同步。我们推测,酒精中毒者在休息时小脑-海马体活动的异常同步在任务参与时被重置为正常的去同步模式。静息状态默认模式同步的异常模式可以被解释为在酒精中毒中保持面孔-名字联想记忆的能力。