DocumentCode :
2098690
Title :
Dynamic diaschisis: anatomically remote and context-sensitive human brain lesions
Author :
Price, C.J. ; Warburton, E.A. ; Moore, C.J. ; Frackowiak, R.S.J. ; Friston, K.J.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Neurology, London, UK
fYear :
2002
fDate :
15-23 June 2002
Abstract :
Functional neuroimaging was used to investigate how lesions to the Broca´s area impair neuronal responses in remote undamaged cortical regions. Four patients with speech output problems, but relatively preserved comprehension, were scanned while viewing words relative to consonant letter strings. In normal subjects, this results in left lateralized activation in the posterior inferior frontal, middle temporal, and posterior inferior temporal cortices. Each patient activated normally in the middle temporal region but abnormally in the damaged posterior inferior frontal cortex and the undamaged posterior inferior temporal cortex. In the damaged frontal region, activity was insensitive to the presence of words but in the undamaged posterior inferior temporal region, activity decreased in the presence of words rather than increasing as it did in the normal individuals. The reversal of responses in the left posterior inferior temporal region illustrate the context-sensitive nature of the abnormality and that failure to activate the left posterior temporal region could not simply be accounted for by insufficient demands on the underlying function. We propose that, in normal individuals, visual word presentation changes the effective connectivity among reading areas and, in patients, posterior temporal responses are abnormal when they depend upon inputs from the damaged inferior frontal cortex. Our results serve to introduce the concept of dynamic diaschisis; the anatomically remote and context-sensitive effects of focal brain lesions. Dynamic diaschisis reveals abnormalities of functional integration that may have profound implications for neuropsychological inference, functional anatomy and, vicariously, cognitive rehabilitation.
Keywords :
biomedical imaging; brain; cellular biophysics; neurophysiology; speech; Broca area; anatomically remote brain lesions; cognitive rehabilitation; context-sensitive abnormality; context-sensitive brain lesions; dynamic diaschisis; focal brain lesions; functional anatomy; functional integration abnormalities; functional neuroimaging; human brain lesions; left lateralized activation; middle temporal cortex; neuropsychological inference; posterior inferior frontal cortex; posterior inferior temporal cortex; preserved comprehension; speech output problems; undamaged cortical regions; visual word presentation; Anatomy; Biochemistry; Brain modeling; Hospitals; Humans; Lesions; Nervous system; Neuroimaging; Neuroscience; Speech;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Imaging, 2002. 5th IEEE EMBS International Summer School on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7507-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SSBI.2002.1233975
Filename :
1233975
Link To Document :
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