TY - JOUR
T1 - Into the future with little past
T2 - exploring mental time travel in a patient with damage to the mammillary bodies/fornix
AU - Tedder, Jacqui
AU - Miller, Laurie
AU - Tu, Sicong
AU - Hornberger, Michael
AU - Lah, Suncica
PY - 2016/2/17
Y1 - 2016/2/17
N2 - Objective: Remembering the past and imaging the future are both manifestations of mental time travel. These processes have been found to be impaired in patients with bilateral hippocampal lesions. Here, we examined the question of whether future thinking is affected by other Papez circuit lesions, namely: damage to the mammillary bodies/fornix.Method: Case (SL) was a 43-year-old woman who developed dense anterograde and retrograde amnesia suddenly, as a result of Wernicke-Korsakoffs syndrome. A region of interest volumetric Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis was performed. We assessed past and future thinking in SL and 11 control subjects of similar age and education with the adapted Autobiographical Interview (AI). Participants also completed a battery of neuropsychological tests.Results: Volumetric MRI analyses revealed severely reduced fornix and mammillary body volumes, but intact hippocampi. SL showed substantial, albeit temporally graded retrograde memory deficits on the adapted AI. Strikingly, whilst SL could not provide any specific details of events from the past two weeks or past two years and had impaired recall of events from her late 30s, her descriptions of potential future events were normal in number of event details and plausibility.Conclusions: This dissociation of past and future events performance after mammillary body and fornix damage is at odds with the findings of the majority of patients with adult onset hippocampal amnesia. It suggests that these non-hippocampal regions of the Papez circuit are only critical for past event retrieval and not for the generation of possible future events.
AB - Objective: Remembering the past and imaging the future are both manifestations of mental time travel. These processes have been found to be impaired in patients with bilateral hippocampal lesions. Here, we examined the question of whether future thinking is affected by other Papez circuit lesions, namely: damage to the mammillary bodies/fornix.Method: Case (SL) was a 43-year-old woman who developed dense anterograde and retrograde amnesia suddenly, as a result of Wernicke-Korsakoffs syndrome. A region of interest volumetric Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis was performed. We assessed past and future thinking in SL and 11 control subjects of similar age and education with the adapted Autobiographical Interview (AI). Participants also completed a battery of neuropsychological tests.Results: Volumetric MRI analyses revealed severely reduced fornix and mammillary body volumes, but intact hippocampi. SL showed substantial, albeit temporally graded retrograde memory deficits on the adapted AI. Strikingly, whilst SL could not provide any specific details of events from the past two weeks or past two years and had impaired recall of events from her late 30s, her descriptions of potential future events were normal in number of event details and plausibility.Conclusions: This dissociation of past and future events performance after mammillary body and fornix damage is at odds with the findings of the majority of patients with adult onset hippocampal amnesia. It suggests that these non-hippocampal regions of the Papez circuit are only critical for past event retrieval and not for the generation of possible future events.
KW - thalamus
KW - Wernicke-Korsakoff's
KW - diencephalic lesion
KW - cognition
KW - memory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84961205884&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13854046.2016.1142612
DO - 10.1080/13854046.2016.1142612
M3 - Article
C2 - 26928513
AN - SCOPUS:84961205884
SN - 1385-4046
VL - 30
SP - 334
EP - 349
JO - Clinical Neuropsychologist
JF - Clinical Neuropsychologist
IS - 2
ER -