Reach and grasp deficits following damage to the dorsal pulvinar

2018-02 | journal article

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​Reach and grasp deficits following damage to the dorsal pulvinar​
Wilke, M. ; Schneider, L. ; Dominguez-Vargas, A.-U. ; Schmidt-Samoa, C. ; Miloserdov, K.; Nazzal, A. & Dechent, P.  et al.​ (2018) 
Cortex99 pp. 135​-149​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2017.10.011 

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Authors
Wilke, Melanie ; Schneider, Lukas ; Dominguez-Vargas, Adan-Ulises ; Schmidt-Samoa, Carsten ; Miloserdov, Kristina; Nazzal, Ahmad; Dechent, Peter ; Cabral-Calderin, Yuranny ; Scherberger, Hansjörg ; Kagan, Igor ; Bähr, Mathias 
Abstract
Expansion of the dorsal pulvinar in humans and its anatomical connectivity suggests its involvement in higher-order cognitive and visuomotor functions. We investigated visuomotor performance in a 31 year old patient (M.B.) with a lesion centered on the medial portion of the dorsal pulvinar (left > right) due to an atypical Sarcoidosis manifestation. Unlike lesions with a vascular etiology, the lesion of M.B. did not include primary sensory or motor thalamic nuclei. Thus, this patient gave us the exceedingly rare opportunity to study the contribution of the dorsal pulvinar to visuomotor behavior in a human without confounding losses in primary sensory or motor domains. We investigated reaching, saccade and visual decision making performance. Patient data in each task was compared to at least seven age matched healthy controls. While saccades were hypometric towards both hemifields, the patient did not show any spatial choice bias or perceptual deficits. At the same time, he exhibited reach and grasp difficulties, which shared features with both, parietal and cerebellar damage. In particular, he had problems to form a precision grip and exhibited reach deficits expressed in decreased accuracy, delayed initiation and prolonged movement durations. Reach deficits were similar in foveal and extrafoveal viewing conditions and in both visual hemifields but were stronger with the right hand. These results suggest that dorsal pulvinar function in humans goes beyond its subscribed role in visual cognition and is critical for the programming of voluntary actions with the hands.
Issue Date
February-2018
Journal
Cortex 
ISSN
1973-8102
eISSN
1973-8102
Language
English

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