Fronto-subcortical circuits for cognition and motivation: Dissociated recovery in a case of loss of psychic self-activation
Author
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Riveros, Rodrigo
Author
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Bakchine, Serge
Author
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Pillon, Bernard
Author
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Poupon, Fabrice
Author
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Miranda, Marcelo
Author
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Slachevsky Chonchol, Andrea
Admission date
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2019-10-15T12:23:36Z
Available date
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2019-10-15T12:23:36Z
Publication date
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2019
Cita de ítem
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Frontiers in Psychology, Volumen 9, Issue JAN, 2019,
Identifier
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16641078
Identifier
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10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02781
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/171577
Abstract
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In humans and non-humans primates, extensive evidence supports the existence of subcortico-cortical circuits for cognition and behavior. Lesions studies are critical to understand the clinical significance of these functionally segregated circuits. Mapping these circuits from lesion studies is difficult given the heterogeneous etiology of the lesions, the lack of long-term and systematic testing of cognitive and behavioral disturbances, as well as the scarcity of neuroimaging data for identifying the precise location and extent of subcortical lesions. Here, we report the long-term follow-up study of a patient who developed a loss of psychic self-activation associated to a dysexecutive syndrome following resuscitation from cardiac arrest. Neuroimaging revealed extensive bilateral lesions in the putamen, with a relative spare of the caudate, and exhibiting a dorsoventral gradient that was predominantly rostrally to the ant