A Neuroscientist’s Framework of Neuropsychologically-Relevant Disorders
by admin ·
This framework is organised by the primary cognitive or behavioural domain that is disrupted, linking it to the typical brain regions involved and example conditions.
Category 1: Disorders of Memory (The Amnesias)
These disorders involve the failure to encode, consolidate, or retrieve information.
-
Amnestic Syndrome: Characterized by a profound anterograde amnesia (inability to form new memories) and often retrograde amnesia (loss of memories prior to the injury).
-
Brain Regions: The medial temporal lobe system, especially the hippocampus, and the diencephalon (mammillary bodies, thalamus).
-
Exemplary Conditions:
-
Alzheimer’s Disease (early and prominent feature).
-
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (from thiamine deficiency, often due to alcoholism).
-
Post-encephalitis or hypoxic brain injury (oxygen deprivation).
-
Herpes Simplex Encephalitis (can severely damage the temporal lobes).
-
-
-
Other Memory Disturbances:
-
Semantic Dementia: A progressive loss of conceptual knowledge (facts, object meanings) with relative preservation of episodic memory. Linked to degeneration of the anterior temporal lobes.
-
Category 2: Disorders of Language (The Aphasias)
These are acquired disorders of language processing, not of the motor act of speaking.
-
Non-fluent Aphasia (Broca’s): Labored, agrammatical speech with relatively preserved comprehension.
-
Brain Region: Broca’s area (posterior inferior frontal gyrus) and surrounding regions.
-
-
Fluent Aphasia (Wernicke’s): Fluent but meaningless speech, with severe impairments in comprehension.
-
Brain Region: Wernicke’s area (posterior superior temporal gyrus).
-
-
Global Aphasia: A severe impairment of all language functions.
-
Brain Region: Large perisylvian lesions encompassing both Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas.
-
-
Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA): A neurodegenerative syndrome where language is the primary and initial deficit.
Category 3: Disorders of Executive Function
These involve deficits in higher-order cognitive control: planning, problem-solving, inhibition, and mental flexibility.
-
Dysexecutive Syndrome: Includes poor planning, impulsivity, disinhibition, inflexible thinking, and impaired judgment.
-
Brain Region: The prefrontal cortex, particularly the dorsolateral (planning, working memory) and orbitofrontal (inhibition, social behaviour) regions.
-
Exemplary Conditions:
-
Frontotemporal Dementia (bvFTD – behavioural variant).
-
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), especially frontal lobe contusions.
-
Prefrontal tumours or strokes.
-
Advanced Hydrocephalus.
-
-
Category 4: Disorders of Visuospatial and Perceptual Processing (Agnosias)
The inability to recognise objects, faces, or spatial relationships, despite intact basic sensation.
-
Visual Agnosia: The inability to recognise visually presented objects.
-
Brain Region: The occipito-temporal visual “what” pathway.
-
-
Prosopagnosia: The specific inability to recognise familiar faces.
-
Brain Region: The fusiform face area (in the temporal lobe).
-
-
Simultanagnosia: The inability to perceive more than one object at a time. A key feature of Bálint’s syndrome.
-
Brain Region: Bilateral damage to the parieto-occipital junctions.
-
Category 5: Disorders of Body Awareness and Representation
-
Anosognosia: A lack of awareness or denial of one’s own neurological deficit (e.g., a paralysed patient insisting they can move their arm).
-
Brain Region: Typically the right inferior parietal lobe or right frontal-parietal networks.
-
-
Hemineglect: A failure to attend to, or represent, the side of space contralateral to a brain lesion (most commonly the left side after a right hemisphere stroke).
-
Brain Region: The right inferior parietal lobe, temporo-parietal junction, and superior temporal gyrus.
-
Category 6: Disorders of Social Cognition and Emotion
-
Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia (bvFTD): Presents with early and profound changes in personality, social conduct, and empathy, often with disinhibition and loss of moral judgment.
-
Brain Region: Atrophy in the frontal and anterior temporal lobes, particularly areas like the ventromedial prefrontal cortex.
-
-
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): Characterised by challenges in social interaction, communication, and theory of mind (the ability to attribute mental states to others).
-
Brain Regions: Involves complex network-level differences, including the amygdala, temporo-parietal junction, and prefrontal regions.
-
Category 7: Syndromes from Disconnection
These occur when white matter tracts connecting specialised brain regions are severed.
-
Alexia without Agraphia: The inability to read, while writing and other language functions remain intact. Caused by a disconnection between the visual cortex and the language areas.
-
Brain Lesion: Damage to the left primary visual cortex and the splenium of the corpus callosum.
-
The Neuroscientist’s Conclusion
From a neuropsychological perspective, the goal is not just to name a disease, but to:
-
Profile the Cognitive Deficit: Precisely characterise the impaired and spared functions using standardised tests.
-
Localize the Dysfunction: Link the cognitive profile to a specific brain network or region.
-
Inform Diagnosis and Rehabilitation: Use this understanding to differentiate between conditions (e.g., Alzheimer’s vs. FTD) and to design targeted cognitive rehabilitation strategies.
Therefore, this framework is a map of the mind’s functional geography. A “neuropsychological disease” is essentially a lesion on this map, revealing the intricate and specialised organisation of the human brain. This is a far more powerful concept than a simple list.
