Learning impairments in monkeys with combined but not separate excitotoxic lesions of the anterior and mediodorsal thalamic nuclei.

Brain Res

MRC Comparative Cognition Team, Department of Experimental Psychology, Downing Street, CB2 3EB, Cambridge, UK.

Published: September 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Damage to the anterior and mediodorsal thalamus in macaques can lead to moderate amnesia, while more severe memory issues are associated with significant damage to the temporal lobes.
  • Lesions in the anterior thalamus mimic impairments seen with damage to the fornix-mamillary pathway, and lesions in the mediodorsal thalamus affect memory across a broader range of tasks.
  • Marmoset monkeys with lesions in both thalamic regions showed severe impairments in a specific memory task but did not struggle with others, indicating both thalamic areas play a role in hippocampal-related memory processing.

Article Abstract

Clinical studies in humans and experiments in macaques suggest that damage to the anterior and the mediodorsal thalamus can induce a moderate amnesia, but a more dense impairment may result from substantial damage within the temporal lobes or their subcortical connections. Lesions of the anterior thalamus in macaques produce impairments which resemble those seen after lesions of the fornix-mamillary pathway, which carries projections from the hippocampus to the anterior thalamus, while lesions of the mediodorsal thalamus, which receives inputs from frontal and temporal cortex, produce moderate impairments on a wider range of memory tasks. In the present study, we have made bilateral excitotoxic lesions of either the anterior or the mediodorsal thalamus, or both, in marmoset monkeys. Monkeys with lesions of both thalamic nuclei were severely impaired on retention and new learning of examples of the visuospatial conditional task, a task which is specifically impaired by lesions of the fornix or hippocampus. They were not impaired on performance of a visuovisual conditional task on which monkeys with hippocampal lesions are impaired, nor were they impaired on any visual discrimination task, including the concurrent discrimination task on which monkeys with temporal neocortical ablations are impaired. Monkeys with separate lesions of either the anterior or the mediodorsal thalamus were not impaired on any of these tasks. These results suggest that the mediodorsal thalamus and the anterior thalamus are both involved in processing the output of the hippocampal-fornix-thalamic circuit. Dense amnesia may result from damage to circuits additional to the temporal lobe efferents to either the anterior or the mediodorsal nuclei.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0006-8993(02)02984-0DOI Listing

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