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Functional neural correlates of strategic memory processes in Mild Cognitive Impairment: an fMRI study

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Author(s):
Joana Bisol Balardin
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Medicina (FM/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Eliane Correa Miotto; Edson Amaro Júnior; Elke Bromberg; Maria Teresa Carthery Goulart
Advisor: Eliane Correa Miotto
Abstract

The present studyinvestigated the effects of different applicationsof verbal learning strategies duringepisodicmemory encoding in patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) (n=18) and normal controls (n=17) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).The main goal of this study was to verify whether externally guided increases in verbal learning strategy application during episodic memory encoding modulate brain activity in memory-related networks in the same level in MCI as in controls. Participantswerescanned twice, using a word-list encoding fMRI paradigm.In the first session, self-initiated encoding strategies were used to intentionally memorize words during encoding. In the second session, participants received an explicit instruction to apply a semantic organization strategy (i.e. semantic clustering)to perform the task. The fMRI word list learning paradigm consisted of alternating blocks of encoding and resting baseline conditions. To perform the spontaneous fMRI session, participants were not instructed about the semantic organization of the words in the lists beforehand or given any practice with related lists. Therefore, any grouping by category observed in the subsequent free recall at the end of this fMRI acquisition was presumed to be self-initiated by the subject. At the end of the spontaneous session, each subject received a brief period of guidance or instructions to apply semantic strategies and organize words in terms of semantic categories during encoding, using a new set of word lists. Immediately after practicing the application of the strategy, participants were scanned again using the same type of paradigm as in the first session, except for the use of new set of word lists and the explicit instruction to apply semantic clustering.Free recall and strategic index scores were assessedafter each session. fMRI brain activation and deactivation during encoding of word lists in memory-related networks were examined across sessions. Results from the fMRI analysis revealed that after the explicit orientation to apply the verbal learning strategy, greater recruitment of frontoparietal network regions were observed in both MCI and control groups in relation to the unconstrained encoding condition. Group-differences in functional deactivations, however, were observed in the medial prefrontal (mPFC) cortex and in the right superior frontal gyrus, two critical nodes of the default mode network, related to the absence of modulation in the activity of the mPFC, along with a lack of suppression of the right superior frontal gyrus in MCI, in response to the increased use of the encoding strategy. A different association between improvement in strategy use and session-related changes in activation of the medial orbitalfrontal cortex between groups was also confirmed. That is, improvements in strategy use in controls contribute to a great extent in the amount of deactivation in OFC, whereas in patients, only a small portion of the increase in activation in this region was predicted by increases in strategy application (AU)

FAPESP's process: 09/09924-5 - An fMRI investigation of semantic cognitive training on episodic memory in patients with mCi
Grantee:Joana Bisol Balardin
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate