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Deep-brain stimulation of the human nucleus accumbens-medial septum enhances memory formation.

Bryan A StrangeSvenja TreuJuan BarciaCristina Torres DiazJavier Gonzalez RosaCristina NombelaJose PinedaDaniel TorresLukas KunzRobin HellerstedtJosue Avecillas-ChasinMonica LaraMarta NavasAna GalarzaJulia GarciaAntonio OlivieroFernando SeijoChristos GanosNingfei LiNikolai AxmacherSantiago CanalsBlanca RenesesAnne Bierbrauer
Published in: Research square (2023)
Deep-brain stimulation (DBS) is a potential novel treatment for memory dysfunction. Current attempts to enhance memory focus on stimulating human hippocampus or entorhinal cortex. However, an alternative strategy is to stimulate brain areas providing modulatory inputs to medial temporal memory-related structures, such as the nucleus accumbens (NAc), which is implicated in enhancing episodic memory encoding. Here, we show that NAc-DBS improves episodic and spatial memory in psychiatric patients. During stimulation, NAc-DBS increased the probability that infrequent (oddball) pictures would be subsequently recollected, relative to periods off stimulation. In a second experiment, NAc-DBS improved performance in a virtual path-integration task. An optimal electrode localization analysis revealed a locus spanning postero-medio-dorsal NAc and medial septum predictive of memory improvement across both tasks. Patient structural connectivity analyses, as well as NAc-DBS-evoked hemodynamic responses in a rat model, converge on a central role for NAc in a hippocampal-mesolimbic circuit regulating encoding into long-term memory. Thus, short-lived, phasic NAc electrical stimulation dynamically improved memory, establishing a critical on-line role for human NAc in episodic memory and providing an empirical basis for considering NAc-DBS in patients with loss of memory function.
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