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Outline. Functional anatomy of the frontal lobesNeurotransmitters in the frontal lobes Deficits resulting from frontal lobe insultTesting prefrontal cortical functionCommon causes of frontal lobe syndromes. Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy . Largest of all lobesSA: ~1/3 / hemisphere3 major area
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1. Frontal Lobe Syndromes Katalin Gyömörey, Ph.D., M.D.
2. Outline Functional anatomy of the frontal lobes
Neurotransmitters in the frontal lobes
Deficits resulting from frontal lobe insult
Testing prefrontal cortical function
Common causes of frontal lobe syndromes
3. Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy Largest of all lobes
SA: ~1/3 / hemisphere
3 major areas in each lobe
Dorsolateral aspect
Medial aspect
Inferior orbital aspect
4. Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy
5. Motor cortex
Primary
Premotor
Supplementary
Frontal eye field
Broca’s speech area Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy
6. Motor Cortex Primary motor cortex
Input: thalamus, BG, sensory, premotor
Output: motor fibers to brainstem and spinal cord
Function: executes design into movement
Lesions:?/? tone; ? power; ? fine motor function on contra lateral side
7. Motor Cortex Premotor cortex
Input: thalamus, BG, sensory cortex
Output: primary motor cortex
Function: stores motor programs; controls coarse postural movements
Lesions: moderate weakness in proximal muscles on contralateral side
8. Motor Cortex Supplementary motor
Input: cingulate gyrus, thalamus, sensory & prefrontal cortex
Output: premotor, primary motor
Function: intentional preparation for movement; procedural memory
Lesions: mutism, akinesis; speech returns but it is non-spontaneous
9. Motor Cortex Frontal eye fields
Input: parietal / temporal (what is target); posterior / parietal cortex (where is target)
Output: caudate; superior colliculus; paramedian pontine reticular formation
Function: executive: selects target and commands movement (saccades)
Lesion: eyes deviate ipsilaterally with destructive lesion and contralaterally with irritating lesions
10. Motor Cortex Broca’s speech area
Input: Wernicke’s
Output: primary motor cortex
Function: speech production (dominant hemisphere); emotional, melodic component of speech (non-dominant)
Lesions: motor aphasia; monotone speech
11. Prefrontal Cortex Orbital prefrontal cortex
Connections: temporal,parietal, thalamus, GP, caudate, SN, insula, amygdala
Part of limbic system
Function: emotional imput, arousal, suppression of distracting signals
Lesions: emotional lability, disinhibition, distractibility, ‘hyperkinesis’
12. Prefrontal Cortex Dorsomedial prefrontal cortex
Connections: temporal,parietal, thalamus, caudate, GP, substantia nigra, cingulate
Functions: motivation, initiation of activity
Lesions: apathy; decreased drive/ awareness/ spontaneous movements; akinetic-abulic syndrome & mutism
13. Prefrontal Cortex Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Connections: motor / sensory convergence areas, thalamus, GP, caudate, SN
Functions: monitors and adjusts behavior using ‘working memory’
Lesions: executive function deficit; disinterest / emotional reactivity; ? attention to relevant stimuli
14. Neurotransmitters Dopaminergic tracts
Origin: ventral tegmental area in midbrain
Projections: prefrontal cortex (mesocortical tract) and to limbic system (mesolimbic tract)
Function: reward; motivation; spontaneity; arousal
15. Neurotransmitters Norepinephrine tracts
Origin: locus ceruleus in brainstem and lateral brainstem tegmentum
Projections: anterior cortex
Functions: alertness, arousal, cognitive processing of somatosensory info
16. Neurotransmitters Serotonin tracts
Origin: raphe nuclei in brainstem
Projections: number of forebrain structures
Function: minor role in prefrontal cortex; sleep, mood, anxiety, feeding
38. Frontal Lobe Syndromes – Summary Personality and emotional changes
Reflect prefrontal lesions
Role of Dopamine and Norepinephrine
Trauma > vascular, tumors
39. Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy Five ‘frontal subcortical circuits’ (Cummings,‘93)
Motor
Oculomotor
Dorsolateral prefrontal
Lateral orbitofrontal
Anterior cingulate
40. ‘Frontal subcortical circuits’ Functional Frontal Lobe Anatomy
41. Frontal subcortical Circuits: 1. Motor Circuit Supplementary Motor & Premotor: planning, initiation & storage of motor programs; fine-tuning of movements
Motor:final station for execution of the the movement according to the design
42. Frontal subcortical Circuits: 2. Oculomotor Circuit Voluntary scanning eye movement
Independent of visual stimuli
43. Frontal subcortical Circuits: 3. Dorsolateral Prefrontal Circuit Executive functions: motor planning, deciding which stimuli to attend to, shifting cognitive sets
Attention span and working memory
44. Frontal subcortical Circuits: 4. Lateral Orbitofrontal Circuit Emotional life and personality structure
Arousal, motivation, affect
Orbitofrontal cortex: consciousness
45. Frontal subcortical Circuits: 5. Anterior Cingulate Circuit Abulia, akinetic mutism