Retraining Dorsal Visual Pathways Improves Cognitive Skills After a Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Author:

Lawton Teri1,Shelley-Tremblay John23ORCID,Lee Roland R.45ORCID,Huang Ming-Xiong45

Affiliation:

1. Cognitive Neuroscience Research and Remediation, Perception Dynamics Institute, Encinitas, CA 92023, USA

2. Department of Psychology, University of South Alabama, UCOM 1123, Mobile, AL 36688, USA

3. Department of Neurology, University of South Alabama, UCOM 1123, Mobile, AL 36688, USA

4. Department of Radiology, VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA 92161, USA

5. Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, CA 92093, USA

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Currently, there are no proven solutions to remediate cognitive deficits in people with a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). One common issue is visual timing deficits, which may be due to processing deficits in dorsal visual pathways. Methods: This study investigates whether a new intervention (PATH) aimed at improving these visual timing deficits is more effective than conventional cognitive therapies that either remediate: (1) pattern discrimination deficits (ventral visual pathway): Orientation Discrimination (OD), or (2) working memory deficits using ReCollect task, for 10 subjects between the ages of 26–60 years old. This study tests the ability of three different cognitive therapies to improve the primary outcome: visual working memory (VWM), and secondary outcomes: processing speed, auditory working memory, and selective attention in mTBI subjects based on neuropsychological tests administered before and after 36 30-min training sessions Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. Results: On average, the PATH group exhibited a 35% improvement in VWM, compared to 15% for ReCollect and 5% for OD. A repeated-measures ANOVA found that improving dorsal stream function improved VWM significantly more than found after the other two interventions. The results reveal the importance of strengthening dorsal pathways more than conventional cognitive therapies to improve cognitive skills after mTBI. A biomarker, MagnetoEncephaloGraphy (MEG) brain recordings, using an N-Back task for subjects in treatment groups, verified these improvements as well. Conclusions: The data from this preliminary study are very promising for a new method improving the brain’s timing, more effective than conventional therapies, to improve cognitive deficits in mTBI patients.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological and Stroke Disorders (NINDS) at the National Institutes of Health

NIH

Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

MDPI AG

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