Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)

Cognitive fatigue in individuals with traumatic brain injury is associated with caudate activation

  • G. R. Wylie,
  • E. Dobryakova,
  • J. DeLuca,
  • N. Chiaravalloti,
  • K. Essad,
  • H. Genova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-08846-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract We investigated differences in brain activation associated with cognitive fatigue between persons with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and healthy controls (HCs). Twenty-two participants with moderate-severe TBI and 20 HCs performed four blocks of a difficult working memory task and four blocks of a control task during fMRI imaging. Cognitive fatigue, assessed before and after each block, was used as a covariate to assess fatigue-related brain activation. The TBI group reported more fatigue than the HCs, though their performance was comparable. Regarding brain activation, the TBI group showed a Task X Fatigue interaction in the caudate tail resulting from a positive correlation between fatigue and brain activation for the difficult task and a negative relationship for the control task. The HC group showed the same Task X Fatigue interaction in the caudate head. Because we had prior hypotheses about the caudate, we performed a confirmatory analysis of a separate dataset in which the same subjects performed a processing speed task. A relationship between Fatigue and brain activation was evident in the caudate for this task as well. These results underscore the importance of the caudate nucleus in relation to cognitive fatigue.