Dissociating thalamic alterations in alcohol use disorder defines specificity of Korsakoff's syndrome

See Tuladhar and de Leeuw (doi:10.1093/brain/awz096) for a scientific commentary on this article. The loci and nature of intra-thalamic alterations in thalamic amnesia, including Korsakoff's syndrome, remain unclear. Using probabilistic tractography in patients with alcohol use disorder with an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain (London, England : 1878) England : 1878), 2019-05, Vol.142 (5), p.1458-1470
Hauptverfasser: Segobin, Shailendra, Laniepce, Alice, Ritz, Ludivine, Lannuzel, Coralie, Boudehent, Céline, Cabé, Nicolas, Urso, Laurent, Vabret, François, Eustache, Francis, Beaunieux, Hélène, Pitel, Anne-Lise
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:See Tuladhar and de Leeuw (doi:10.1093/brain/awz096) for a scientific commentary on this article. The loci and nature of intra-thalamic alterations in thalamic amnesia, including Korsakoff's syndrome, remain unclear. Using probabilistic tractography in patients with alcohol use disorder with and without amnesia, Segobin et al. generate a structural pathophysiological model for the memory deficits, and identify a potential neuroimaging biomarker for Korsakoff's syndrome. Abstract The thalamus, a relay organ consisting of several nuclei, is shared between the frontocerebellar circuit and the Papez circuit, both particularly affected in alcohol use disorder. Shrinkage of the thalamus is known to be more severe in alcoholics with Korsakoff's syndrome than in those without neurological complications (uncomplicated alcoholics). While thalamic atrophy could thus be a key factor explaining amnesia in Korsakoff's syndrome, the loci and nature of alterations within the thalamic nuclei in uncomplicated alcoholics and alcoholics with Korsakoff's syndrome remains unclear. Indeed, the literature from animal and human models is disparate regarding whether the anterior thalamic nuclei, or the mediodorsal nuclei are particularly affected and would be responsible for amnesia. Sixty-two participants (20 healthy controls, 26 uncomplicated alcoholics and 16 patients with Korsakoff's syndrome) underwent a diffusion tensor imaging sequence and T1-weighted MRI. State-of-the-art probabilistic tractography was used to segment the thalamus according to its connections to the prefrontal cortex and cerebellar Cruses I and II for the frontocerebellar circuit's executive loop, the precentral gyrus and cerebellar lobes IV-VI for the frontocerebellar circuit's motor loop, and hippocampus for the Papez circuit. The connectivity and volumes of these parcellations were calculated. Tractography showed that the hippocampus was principally connected to the anterior thalamic nuclei while the prefrontal cortex was principally connected to the mediodorsal nuclei. The fibre pathways connecting these brain regions and their respective thalamic nuclei have also been validated. ANCOVA, with age and gender as covariates, on connectivity measures showed abnormalities in both patient groups for thalamic parcellations connected to the hippocampus only [F(2,57) = 12.1; P < 0.0001; η2 = 0.2964; with graded effects of the number of connections from controls to uncomplicated alcoholics to Korsakoff's syndrome
ISSN:0006-8950
1460-2156
DOI:10.1093/brain/awz056