临床认知能力下降过程中的大脑连接重组。

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurological Sciences Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-30 DOI:10.1007/s10072-024-07688-1
Demet Yüksel Dal, Zerrin Yıldırım, Hakan Gürvit, Alkan Kabakçıoğlu, Burak Acar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,导致阿尔茨海默病痴呆症(ADD)的临床认知能力下降一直被解释为一种断裂综合征,阻碍了大脑的信息流能力,从而导致众所周知的 ADD 症状。从这个角度来看,大脑结构和功能连接组分析在大脑研究中发挥着核心作用。然而,目前的大多数研究都隐含地假定,无论是在整个大脑还是在固定的皮层区域测量,伴随认知能力下降的变化在时间上都是单调的。我们研究的是大脑结构和功能连通性的重组,而不假定整个大脑的结构和功能连通性都会发生变化。我们利用节点同类性作为连通性的局部拓扑测量方法,并采用以数据为中心的方法来识别和验证相关局部区域,以及了解潜在重组的性质。我们对初步实验数据的分析表明,在统计意义上,高匀称性区域和低匀称性区域取决于疾病的阶段,并因结构性和功能性连通组而异。我们的研究结果提出了一个新的视角,即随着认知能力的衰退,大脑会发生动态的、可能是退化性和代偿性混合的拓扑结构改变。
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Reorganization of brain connectivity across the spectrum of clinical cognitive decline.

Clinical cognitive decline, leading to Alzheimer's Disease Dementia (ADD), has long been interpreted as a disconnection syndrome, hindering the information flow capacity of the brain, hence leading to the well-known symptoms of ADD. The structural and functional brain connectome analyses play a central role in studies of brain from this perspective. However, most current research implicitly assumes that the changes accompanying the progression of cognitive decline are monotonous in time, whether measured across the entire brain or in fixed cortical regions. We investigate the structural and functional connectivity-wise reorganization of the brain without such assumptions across the entire spectrum. We utilize nodal assortativity as a local topological measure of connectivity and follow a data-centric approach to identify and verify relevant local regions, as well as to understand the nature of underlying reorganization. The analysis of our preliminary experimental data points to statistically significant, hyper and hypo-assortativity regions that depend on the disease's stage, and differ for structural and functional connectomes. Our results suggest a new perspective into the dynamic, potentially a mix of degenerative and compensatory, topological alterations that occur in the brain as cognitive decline progresses.

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来源期刊
Neurological Sciences
Neurological Sciences 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
3.00%
发文量
743
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: Neurological Sciences is intended to provide a medium for the communication of results and ideas in the field of neuroscience. The journal welcomes contributions in both the basic and clinical aspects of the neurosciences. The official language of the journal is English. Reports are published in the form of original articles, short communications, editorials, reviews and letters to the editor. Original articles present the results of experimental or clinical studies in the neurosciences, while short communications are succinct reports permitting the rapid publication of novel results. Original contributions may be submitted for the special sections History of Neurology, Health Care and Neurological Digressions - a forum for cultural topics related to the neurosciences. The journal also publishes correspondence book reviews, meeting reports and announcements.
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