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Study identifies brain network connections associated with anosognosia

06.09.23 | Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Anosognosia is a condition in which a patient is unaware of their neurological deficit or psychiatric condition. Visual anosognosia, also called Anton syndrome, is associated with complete cortical blindness and unawareness of vision loss. Researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, sought to identify brain network connections associated with anosognosia. The investigators analyzed the connectivity patterns of 267 lesion locations associated with either vision loss (with and without awareness) or weakness (with and without awareness). Researchers used a recently validated technique termed lesion network mapping to test whether these lesion-induced deficits map to specific brain networks. They were able to identify distinct network connections associated with visual anosognosia and motor anosognosia as well as a shared network for awareness of these deficits. The visual anosognosia network was defined by connectivity to visual and metacognitive processing regions while the shared network for awareness converged on the hippocampus and precuneus—brain structures that are associated with memory.

“Despite being described more than 100 years ago, visual anosognosia has had little formal analysis,” said corresponding author Isaiah Kletenik, MD, an investigator at Brigham’s Division of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology and the Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics. “Our results are the first to identify the role of the hippocampus in a systematic analysis of visual anosognosia. Memory-associated structures are necessary to recognize a deficit by comparing visual inputs to prior information stored in memory while updating self-knowledge about performance compared to previous abilities.”

Read more in Annals of Neurology.

Annals of Neurology

10.1002/ana.26709

Observational study

Human tissue samples

Network Localization of Awareness in Visual and Motor Anosognosia

8-Jun-2023

M.D.F. is a consultant for Magnus Medical and Soterix and holds intellectual property on using connectivity imaging to guide brain stimulation. The other authors report no competing interests.

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Contact Information

Haley Bridger
Brigham and Women's Hospital
hbridger@bwh.harvard.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
Brigham and Women's Hospital. (2023, June 9). Study identifies brain network connections associated with anosognosia. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ42Y9K8/study-identifies-brain-network-connections-associated-with-anosognosia.html
MLA:
"Study identifies brain network connections associated with anosognosia." Brightsurf News, Jun. 9 2023, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ42Y9K8/study-identifies-brain-network-connections-associated-with-anosognosia.html.