Gillis M Meredith, Hampstead Benjamin M
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Center for Rehabilitation Medicine, 1441 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.
Rehabilitation R&D Center of Excellence, Atlanta VAMC, 1670 Clairmont Road (151R), Decatur, GA, 30033, USA.
Brain Imaging Behav. 2015 Dec;9(4):801-20. doi: 10.1007/s11682-014-9337-5.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivors typically exhibit significant learning and memory deficits and also frequently demonstrate hyperactivation during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) tasks involving working memory encoding and maintenance. However, it remains unclear whether the hyperactivation observed during such working memory tasks is also present during long-term memory encoding. The preliminary experiments presented here were designed to examine this question. In Experiment 1, 7 healthy controls (HC) and 7 patients with moderate to severe TBI encoded ecologically relevant object location associations (OLA) while undergoing fMRI and then completed a memory test outside of the fMRI environment. fMRI data analysis included only the correctly encoded trials and revealed hyperactivation in the TBI relative to HC group in regions critical for OLA encoding, including bilateral dorsal and ventral visual processing areas, bilateral frontoparietal working memory network regions, and the left medial temporal lobe. There was also an incidental finding that this hyperactivation persisted after multiple exposures to the same stimulus, which may indicate an attenuated repetition suppression effect that could ultimately contribute to cognitive fatigue and inefficient memory encoding after TBI. Experiment 2 directly assessed repetition suppression in some of the same HC and TBI participants. During early encoding trials, the TBI group showed large areas of hyperactivation in the right prefrontal cortex and bilateral posterior parietal cortices relative to the HC. Following additional exposure to these stimuli, the TBI group showed repetition suppression in visual and spatial processing regions, but continued to show hyperactivation in the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Findings from these preliminary studies may reflect that increased reliance on cognitive control mechanisms following TBI extends to memory encoding.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)幸存者通常存在显著的学习和记忆缺陷,并且在涉及工作记忆编码和维持的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)任务中也经常表现出过度激活。然而,目前尚不清楚在这种工作记忆任务中观察到的过度激活在长期记忆编码过程中是否也存在。本文介绍的初步实验旨在研究这个问题。在实验1中,7名健康对照者(HC)和7名中度至重度TBI患者在进行fMRI时对与生态相关的物体位置关联(OLA)进行编码,然后在fMRI环境外完成记忆测试。fMRI数据分析仅包括正确编码的试验,结果显示TBI组相对于HC组在对OLA编码至关重要的区域出现过度激活,包括双侧背侧和腹侧视觉处理区域、双侧额顶叶工作记忆网络区域以及左侧内侧颞叶。还有一个偶然发现是,在多次接触相同刺激后,这种过度激活仍然存在,这可能表明重复抑制效应减弱,最终可能导致TBI后的认知疲劳和低效记忆编码。实验2直接评估了部分相同的HC和TBI参与者的重复抑制情况。在早期编码试验中,相对于HC组,TBI组在右侧前额叶皮质和双侧顶叶后皮质出现大面积过度激活。在额外接触这些刺激后,TBI组在视觉和空间处理区域表现出重复抑制,但右侧背外侧前额叶皮质仍持续出现过度激活。这些初步研究的结果可能反映出TBI后对认知控制机制的依赖增加延伸到了记忆编码。