4.3 Editorial Material

HM's Contributions to Neuroscience: A Review and Autopsy Studies

Journal

HIPPOCAMPUS
Volume 24, Issue 11, Pages 1267-1286

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hipo.22354

Keywords

hippocampus; entorhinal cortex; perirhinal cortex; parahippocampal cortex; amygdala

Categories

Funding

  1. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  2. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [1442027] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  3. NCRR NIH HHS [P41-RR14075, U24 RR021382, P41 RR014075] Funding Source: Medline
  4. NIA NIH HHS [R01 AG008122, K01 AG028521, R01 AG022381, 5R01AG008122-22, AG022381] Funding Source: Medline
  5. NIBIB NIH HHS [R01 EB006758, R01EB006758] Funding Source: Medline
  6. NIMH NIH HHS [5U01-MH093765, U01 MH093765] Funding Source: Medline

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H.M., Henry Molaison, was one of the world's most famous amnesic patients. His amnesia was caused by an experimental brain operation, bilateral medial temporal lobe resection, carried out in 1953 to relieve intractable epilepsy. He died on December 2, 2008, and that night we conducted a wide variety of in situ MRI scans in a 3 T scanner at the Massachusetts General Hospital (Mass General) Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging. For the in situ experiments, we acquired a full set of standard clinical scans, 1 mm isotropic anatomical scans, and multiple averages of 440 m isotropic anatomical scans. The next morning, H.M.'s body was transported to the Mass General Morgue for autopsy. The photographs taken at that time provided the first documentation of H.M.'s lesions in his physical brain. After tissue fixation, we obtained ex vivo structural data at ultra-high resolution using 3 T and 7 T magnets. For the ex vivo acquisitions, the highest resolution images were 210 m isotropic. Based on the MRI data, the anatomical areas removed during H.M.'s experimental operation were the medial temporopolar cortex, piriform cortex, virtually all of the entorhinal cortex, most of the perirhinal cortex and subiculum, the amygdala (except parts of the dorsal-most nucleicentral and medial), anterior half of the hippocampus, and the dentate gyrus (posterior head and body). The posterior parahippocampal gyrus and medial temporal stem were partially damaged. Spared medial temporal lobe tissue included the dorsal-most amygdala, the hippocampal-amygdalo-transition-area, approximate to 2 cm of the tail of the hippocampus, a small part of perirhinal cortex, a small portion of medial hippocampal tissue, and approximate to 2 cm of posterior parahippocampal gyrus. H.M.'s impact on the field of memory has been remarkable, and his contributions to neuroscience continue with a unique dataset that includes in vivo, in situ, and ex vivo high-resolution MRI. (c) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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