Fractal Similarity of Pain Brain Networks.

Q3 Neuroscience Advances in neurobiology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1007/978-3-031-47606-8_32
Camille Fauchon, Hélène Bastuji, Roland Peyron, Luis Garcia-Larrea
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Abstract

The conscious perception of pain is the result of dynamic interactions of neural activities from local brain regions to distributed brain networks. Mapping out the networks of functional connections between brain regions that form and disperse when an experimental participant received nociceptive stimulations allow to characterize the pattern of network connections related to the pain experience.Although the pattern of intra- and inter-areal connections across the brain are incredibly complex, they appear also largely scale free, with "fractal" connectivity properties reproducing at short and long-time scales. Our results combining intracranial recordings and functional imaging in humans during pain indicate striking similarities in the activity and topological representation of networks at different orders of temporality, with reproduction of patterns of activation from the millisecond to the multisecond range. The connectivity analyzed using graph theory on fMRI data was organized in four sets of brain regions matching those identified through iEEG (i.e., sensorimotor, default mode, central executive, and amygdalo-hippocampal).Here, we discuss similarities in brain network organization at different scales or "orders," in participants as they feel pain. Description of this fractal-like organization may provide clues about how our brain regions work together to create the perception of pain and how pain becomes chronic when its organization is altered.

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疼痛脑网络的分形相似性
对疼痛的有意识感知是神经活动从局部脑区到分布式脑网络动态相互作用的结果。绘制实验参与者在接受痛觉刺激时脑区之间形成和分散的功能连接网络图,可以描述与疼痛体验相关的网络连接模式。虽然整个大脑的真实内部和真实之间的连接模式极其复杂,但它们在很大程度上似乎也是无尺度的,其 "分形 "连接特性在短时间和长时间尺度上都会再现。我们将人类在疼痛时的颅内记录和功能成像结合起来的结果表明,在不同的时间顺序上,网络的活动和拓扑表示具有惊人的相似性,从毫秒到多秒范围内的激活模式都能再现。利用图论对 fMRI 数据进行分析后发现,其连通性在四组脑区(即感觉运动区、默认模式区、中央执行区和杏仁核-海马区)中的组织与通过 iEEG 确定的脑区相吻合。对这种分形组织的描述可能会为我们提供一些线索,让我们了解我们的大脑区域是如何协同工作以产生对疼痛的感知,以及当其组织发生改变时,疼痛是如何变成慢性的。
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来源期刊
Advances in neurobiology
Advances in neurobiology Neuroscience-Neurology
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊最新文献
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