Neuroanatomy & Neuropsychiatric Aspects of Frontal Lobe
Neuroanatomy & Neuropsychiatric Aspects of Frontal Lobe
CONTENTS
Anatomy of frontal lobe
Neuroanatomy
Functional anatomy
Neurotransmitters
Frontal lobe syndromes Disease associated with frontal lobe lesions
Psychiatric illnesses
Frontal lobe epilepsy Frontal lobe & memory
Cerebral Features:
Gyri Elevated ridges winding around the brain. Sulci Small grooves dividing the gyri
Central Sulcus Divides the Frontal Lobe from the Parietal Lobe
Specific Sulci/Fissures:
Central Sulcus Longitudinal Fissure
* Note: Occasionally, the Insula is considered the fifth lobe. It is located deep to the Temporal Lobe.
FRONTAL LOBE
Motor cortex Primary motor
Prefrontal cortex
Dorsolateral Medial Orbitofrontal
Premotor
Supplementary motor Frontal eye field Brocas speech area
Central sulcus
Prefrontal cortex
BA 9, 10, 11, 12
Prefrontal area consist of paralimbic (anterior cingulate gyrus & posterior orbitofrontal) and high order association cortex (dorsolateral convexity & anteromedial surface) This area was considered silent
Prefrontal cortex
Motor Cortex
Primary motor cortex BA 4
Input: thalamus, BG, sensory, premotor Output: motor fibers to brainstem and spinal cord Function: executes design into movement Lesions:tone (spasticity); power; fine motor function on contra lateral side
Bedside test : Motor strength of hand grip Motor speed on finger tapping
Diagnostically, poor performances suggest local lesions such as vascular or neoplastic pathology, or a generalized lesion such as a degenerative disease.
Motor Cortex
Premotor cortex BA 6
Input: thalamus, BG, sensory cortex Output: primary motor cortex Function: sensorimotor integration, stores motor programs; controls coarse postural movements Lesions: moderate weakness in proximal muscles on contralateral side, spasticity, grasp reflex, buccofacial apraxia, inability to make use of sensory feedback in the performance of smooth movements
Bedside test :-
1. Sensorimotor abilities are tested by asking the patient touch each finger to the thumb in succession as rapidly as possible (Watch for speed and dexterity) 2. Apraxia can be tested by asking the patient to "blow a kiss" and to demonstrate the use of a shovel.
Poor performance carries the diagnostic implications
MOTOR CORTEX
Supplementary motor area medial aspect of BA 6
behavior,
Lesions: transient transcortical motor aphasia (mutism), impairment in motor initiation (akinesis); impaired rapid alternating movements, grasp reflex, alien hand syndrome
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: selects target and commands movement (saccades) Lesion: eyes deviate ipsilaterally with destructive lesion and contralaterally with irritating lesions
Bedside test:-
1. Ask the patient to follow the movement of a finger from left to right and up and down.
2. Ask the patient to look from left to right, up and down (with no finger to follow). Note inability to move or jerky movement .
MOTOR CORTEX
Brocas speech area BA 44, 45 Input: wernickes area Output: primary motor cortex Function: speech production (dominant hemisphere); emotional melodic component of speech (non-dominant) Lesions: motor aphasia; dysprosody (monotonus speech) Speech is sparse, slow, hesitant, disturbance of rhythm and articulation, difficulty in word finding, wrong words are chosen & often mispronounced, perseveration, agrammatism
Pt recognize his mistakes & tries to correct them but becomes impatient
Phrase length is small :- telegraphic language Writing is also affected with speech, but comprehension is preserved
PREFRONTAL CORTEX
Orbital prefrontal cortex
BA 10 & 11
Connections: temporal, parietal, thalamus, GP, caudate, SN, insula, amygdala Part of limbic system
Function: It mediates empathic, civil and socially appropriate behavior, emotional input, arousal, suppression of distracting signals
Lesions: emotional lability, disinhibition, distractibility, hyperkinesis
Much of the personality change described in cases of frontal lobe injury is due to lesions in this area
BEDSIDE TESTS: 1. Does the patient dress or behave in a way which suggests lack of concern with the feelings of others or without concern to accepted social customs. 2. Test sense of smell - coffee, cloves etc. 3. Go/no-go Test- The patient is asked to make a response to one signal (the Go signal) and not to respond to another signal (the no-go signal) 4. The Stroop Test - Examines the ability of the patient to inhibit responses
PREFRONTAL CORTEX
Medial prefrontal cortex
PREFRONTAL CORTEX
Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
area 46
Connections: motor / sensory convergence areas, thalamus, GP, caudate, SN Functions: executive functioning include the integration of sensory information, the generation of a range of response alternatives to environmental challenges, the selection of the most appropriate response, maintenance of task set, sequential ordering of data, self-evaluation of performance and the selection of a replacement responses if the first applied response fails monitors and adjusts behavior using working memory Lesions: executive function deficit, apathy, aspontaneity and impoverished & stereotyped thought process
Alternating hand sequences :- one hand is placed palm upwards and the other is place palm downwards, and the patient is then asked to reverse these positions as rapidly as possible or Patient taps twice with one fist and once with the other, then after the rhythm is established, the patient is asked to change over the number of beats Patients with frontal lobe deficits usually perform poorly on these tests, often unable to follow relatively simple instructions
NECESSARY WHERE UNCERTAINTY REMAINS Commonly employed tests include Controlled Oral Word Association Test (Benton, 1968) and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Tests (Heaton, 1985)
Please sort the 60 cards under the 4 samples (stimulus cards). I wont tell you the rule, but I will announce every mistake. The rule will change after 10 correct placements.
NEUROTRANSMITTERS
Dopaminergic tracts
NEUROTRANSMITTERS
Norepinephrine tracts
NEUROTRANSMITTERS
Serotonergic tracts
PREFRONTAL LESIONS cause prominent personality changes without loss of general intelligence, motor, sensory or memory functions FRONTAL LOBE SYNDROME
Frontal lobe syndrome
Features not unique to frontal lobe pathology Lack of one to one correspondence b/w behavior & location of lesion
A 45 year old man with b/l prefrontal strokes was found to have
Normal neurological examination
Kliest first suggested that components of frontal lobe syndrome may be related to specific regional involvement
Orbital lesions cause : Disinhibition, failure to appreciate consequences of ones action, euphoria (effect on personality & social behavior)
Lesions of dorsolateral convexity cause : Apathy, aspontaneity, impoverished & stereotyped thought process Left prefrontal injury : loss of executive & planning function, depression, When supplementary/ premotor area affected : transcortical motor aphasia, impairment of rapid skilled manual movements Right prefrontal injury : left sided extinction & neglect, blunted or labile affect, impersistence, disinhibition, confabulation, alien hand sign
Patients with classical frontal lobe syndrome usually have b/l lesions encompassing both orbital & lateral cortex Negative symptoms : Lack of initiative & spontaneity General diminution of motor activity (sluggish response)
Other pts may show positive symptoms Restless Hyperactive yet lack of goal directed behavior Mild euphoria Tendency to joke/pun State of excitement, pressured speech Overfamilarity Outburst of irritability Such changes are rarely sustained and when left to themselves these pts become inert & apathetic
Social awareness & behavior Less concerned with consequences of his acts Loss of social graces Coarsening of personality Lack of normal adult tact & restraints Little concern about his future Fails to plan ahead, to carry out ideas Sexual disinhibition Pt usually has little insight into the changes
Inability to plan & execute multistepped behavior is hallmark of prefrontal lesions Can manage simple one or two step command Evaluated by asking the pt & spouse, do things get started but not completed? Ask pt about planning a vacation, changing a tyre.
Wisconsin card sorting test : shift cognition sets Perseveration is another symptom of frontal lobe disorder but not pathognomic Concrete thinking or lack of abstraction
Proverb test Similarity test
Bifrontal lesions Bad judgment resulting from deficits affecting Planning & carrying out multistepped behavior, adaptation to new situation, understanding & reacting social cues
Abulia : Poverty of thought action & emotion is common with large midline and b/l dorsofrontal lesion Abulia is characterized by loss of spontaneity & will power They comprehend the question, hesitate, delay respond, seem to ignore or give yes no answer Severely abulic pt do not speak unless spoken, do not move unless they are hungry or ready to void & may be incontinent Tidal waves of emotional & motor behavior (brief rage, irritability, hyperactivity) may emerge from tranquil sea of abulia (placid, apathetic, disinterested) Perseveration v/s abulia :- Random A test.
tamping iron blown through skull: L frontal brain injury excellent physical recovery dramatic personality change: no longer Gage:stubborn, lacked in consideration for others, unreliable, lacking in social skills, had profane speech, failed to execute his plans
Utilisation behavior (Lhermitte 1986) Observed pt with frontal lobe lesion in complex everyday life situation
He noted lack of personal autonomy with an excessive dependence on social & physical environment (environmental dependency syndrome)
Decisions of pts actions were not made by themselves Social & physical environments issue the order to use them even the pt has neither idea or nor intend to use them
Vascular disease
Common cause especially in elderly
MCA territory
Dorsolateral frontal lobe
Degenerative diseases
Picks disease Huntingtons disease
Infectious diseases
Neurosyphilis Herpes simplex encephalitis
Depression
ADHD OCD Antisocial personality disorder
SCHIZOPHRENIA
Symptoms can be aggregated in 3 broad clusters
(Liddle 1987)
1. Psychomotor poverty syndrome Affecting speech & movement, blunting of affect Decreased rCBF in left prefrontal & parietal cortex
2. Reality distortion syndrome Positive symptoms hallucinations & delusions Increase rCBF in left parahippocampal gyrus & contiguous area
ADHD suffers usually have deficits in these functions Right frontal lobe is smaller in children with ADHD Problems in the circuit between three regions are the underlying mechanisms that cause ADHD symptoms 1. Prefrontal cortex (command center) 2. Caudate nucleus
OCD is caused by problems in communication between the frontal lobe and basal ganglia
On PET Scan, OCD pt burned energy more quickly in the frontal lobe and cingulate pathway Abnormally low levels of serotonin found in people with OCD
Symptoms : Physical/emotional aura of tingling, numbness, tension Fear expressed on face Tonic posturing & clonic movements Often misdiagnosed as psychogenic seizures
Supplementary motor area : somatosensory aura precedes tonic posturing which is u/l, asymmetrical Motor symptoms :- facial grimacing, complex automatism like kicking, pelvic thrusting
Dorsolateral cortex : tonic posturing & clonic movements c/l head turning & eye deviation
Focal frontal injury does not produce a severe amnesic disorder It can cause more subtle, yet definable, memory deficits in form of an impairment in the control of memory Prefrontal cortex appears to be crucial for the monitoring and control of memory processes, both at the time of encoding and at the time of retrieval Significant impairment was observed on tests of free recall (80% of studies), cued recall (50% of studies) and even on tests of recognition (8% of studies)
TO CONCLUDE
Frontal lobe forms about 1/3 part of each cerebral hemisphere Phylogenetically newest part Previously considered silent brain, but now found to produce variety of symptoms 2 major parts (a) precentral/motor cortex :- planning, execution & control of c/l body movements (b) prefrontal cortex :- emotion control center & home of our personality Bilateral prefrontal cortex lesion leads to frontal lobe sydrome
TO CONCLUDE
Left prefrontal cortex lesion :- psuedodepressive type Right prefrontal cortex lesion :- psuedopsychotic type Inability to plan & execute multistepped behavior is hallmark of prefrontal lesion Frontal lobe functions are deranged in schizophrenia, depression, ADHD, OCD, antisocial personality disorder, alcoholism etc. Frontal lobe epilepsy is often misdiagnosed as psychogenic seizures prefrontal cortex is crucial for control of memory during encoding & recall