Selective Loss of Neurons From the Thalamic Reticular Nucleus Following Severe Human Head Injury
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Neurotrauma
- Vol. 10 (2), 151-165
- https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.1993.10.151
Abstract
The GABAergic neurons of the thalamic reticular nucleus, or nucleus reticularis thalami (RT), have been implicated as important components in attentional processing systems. Neurons in the RT are exquisitely sensitive to degeneration following kainic and domoic acid toxicity, experimental global ischemia, human cardiac arrest, and experimental closed head injury in nonhuman primates. The present study was performed to establish whether the selective loss of human RT neurons occurred following severe head injury. Brains from 37 human nonsurvivors of head injury were examined for evidence of RT neuronal loss. RT lesions in were found in 36 of 37 cases, representing 65 of 73 (89%) of the reticular nuclei examined. The incidence of RT lesions was similar in all age groups: 13 of 14 cases (92.9%) in the pediatric (≤ 16 years) group, 33 of 37 (89.2%) in the young adult (18–45 years) group, and 19 of 22 (86.4%) in the older adult (>45 years) group. RT lesions were characterized by loss of one fourth to three fourths of the neurons from the region of the nucleus associated with the frontal cortex and thalamic mediodorsal (MD) and ventrolateral (VL) nuclei. Sparing of RT neurons correlated highly with the presence of extensive frontal cortical lesions, suggesting that an intact corticothalamic projection was necessary for RT degeneration following head injury. A pathologic cascade with a prominent excitotoxic component is proposed. The loss of these inhibitory thalamic reticular neurons and the resultant thalamic and neocortical neuronal dysfunctions may underlie some forms of attentional deficits that persist following head injury.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Degeneration of rat thalamic reticular neurons following intrathalamic domoic acid injectionNeuroscience Letters, 1993
- The Role of Glutamate Neurotoxicity in Hypoxic-Ischemic Neuronal DeathAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1990
- Electrophysiology and Pharmacology of the Corticothalamic Input to Lateral Thalamic Nuclei: an Intracellular Study in the CatEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1990
- Ischemic Damage in Hippocampal CA1 is Dependent on Glutamate Release and Intact Innervation from CA3Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1989
- Excitatory amino acids mediate responses elicited in vitro by stimulation of cortical afferents to reticularis thalami neurons of the ratNeuroscience, 1989
- Axon collaterals in the thalamic reticular nucleus from thalamocortical neurons of the rat ventrobasal thalamusJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1987
- Function of the thalamic reticular complex: the searchlight hypothesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984
- The nature and time course of the neuronal alterations resulting from oligaemia and hypoglycaemia in the brain of Macaca mulattaBrain Research, 1971
- Regional degeneration of the thalamic reticular nucleus following cortical ablations in monkeysJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1952
- Über thalamische DemenzEuropean Neurology, 1942