4.2 Article

Volumes of the Hippocampal Formation Differentiate Component Processes of Memory in a Community Sample of Homeless and Marginally Housed Persons

Journal

ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 548-562

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/arclin/acy066

Keywords

Hippocampus; Memory; Neuroimaging; Cognition; Comorbidity

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [CBG-101827]
  2. British Columbia Mental Health and Substance Use Services (an Agency of the Provincial Health Services Authority)
  3. William and Ada Isabelle Steel Fund
  4. Jack Bell Chair in Schizophrenia

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Objective: Persons who are homeless or marginally housed exhibit significant cognitive dysfunction, with memory being the most impaired domain. Hippocampal subfield volumes have been found to differentially relate to component processes of memory. The neural correlates of memory have not been previously examined in marginalized persons who are understudied and underserved. We examined whether hippocampal subfields and entorhinal cortex volumes are uniquely related to indices of verbal episodic memory using the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test - Revised. Method: Data was used from a large sample of community dwelling homeless and marginally housed adults (N = 227). Regression analyses were conducted to examine hippocampal subfield volumes (CA1, CA3, CA4, dentate gyrus, subiculum) and entorhinal cortex, and their associations with measures of verbal immediate recall, learning slope, and verbal delayed recall. Results: Greater CA3 subfield volume was associated with better performance on an index of encoding (immediate recall), but only in older individuals. Greater CA1 and subiculum volumes were associated with better performance on immediate and delayed recall (measures that tap into retrieval processes), but not with learning slope (a more pure index of encoding). Entorhinal cortex volume was related to all components of memory beyond total hippocampal volume. Conclusions: Our results suggest common neuroanatomical correlates of memory dysfunction in large sample of marginalized persons, and these are uniquely related to different components of memory. These findings have clinical relevance for marginalized populations and theoretical relevance to the growing literature on functional specialization of the hippocampal subfields.

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