Cargando…

A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study

BACKGROUND: Attentional disorders (ADD) feature decreased attention span, impulsivity, and over-activity interfering with successful lives. Childhood onset ADD frequently persists to adulthood. Etiology may be hereditary or disease associated. Prevalence is 5% but recognition may be ‘overshadowed’ b...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Duffy, Frank H., Shankardass, Aditi, McAnulty, Gloria B., Als, Heidelise
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5343416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28274264
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12916-017-0805-9
_version_ 1782513360013623296
author Duffy, Frank H.
Shankardass, Aditi
McAnulty, Gloria B.
Als, Heidelise
author_facet Duffy, Frank H.
Shankardass, Aditi
McAnulty, Gloria B.
Als, Heidelise
author_sort Duffy, Frank H.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Attentional disorders (ADD) feature decreased attention span, impulsivity, and over-activity interfering with successful lives. Childhood onset ADD frequently persists to adulthood. Etiology may be hereditary or disease associated. Prevalence is 5% but recognition may be ‘overshadowed’ by comorbidities (brain injury, mood disorder) thereby escaping formal recognition. Blinded diagnosis by MRI has failed. ADD may not itself manifest a single anatomical pattern of brain abnormality but may reflect multiple, unique responses to numerous and diverse etiologies. Alternatively, a stable ADD-specific brain pattern may be better detected by brain physiology. EEG coherence, measuring cortical connectivity, is used to explore this possibility. METHODS: Participants: Ages 2 to 22 years; 347 ADD and 619 neurotypical controls (CON). Following artifact reduction, principal components analysis (PCA) identifies coherence factors with unique loading patterns. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) determines discrimination success differentiating ADD from CON. Split-half and jackknife analyses estimate prospective diagnostic success. Coherence factor loading constitutes an ADD-specific pattern or ‘connectome’.  RESULTS: PCA identified 40 factors explaining 50% of total variance. DFA on CON versus ADD groups utilizing all factors was highly significant (p≤0.0001). ADD subjects were separated into medication and comorbidity subgroups. DFA (stepping allowed) based on CON versus ADD without comorbidities or medication treatment successfully classified the correspondingly held out ADD subjects in every instance. Ten randomly generated split-half replications of the entire population demonstrated high-average classification success for each of the left out test-sets (overall: CON, 83.65%; ADD, 90.07%). Higher success was obtained with more restricted age sub-samples using jackknifing: 2-8 year olds (CON, 90.0%; ADD, 90.6%); 8-14 year olds (CON, 96.8%; ADD 95.9%); and 14-20 year-olds (CON, 100.0%; ADD, 97.1%). The connectome manifested decreased and increased coherence. Patterns were complex and bi-hemispheric; typically reported front-back and left-right loading patterns were not observed. Subtemporal electrodes (seldom utilized) were prominently involved.  CONCLUSIONS: Results demonstrate a stable coherence connectome differentiating ADD from CON subjects including subgroups with and without comorbidities and/or medications. This functional ‘connectome’, constitutes a diagnostic ADD phenotype. Split-half replications support potential for EEG-based ADD diagnosis, with increased accuracy using limited age ranges. Repeated studies could assist recognition of physiological change from interventions (pharmacological, behavioral).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5343416
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53434162017-03-10 A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study Duffy, Frank H. Shankardass, Aditi McAnulty, Gloria B. Als, Heidelise BMC Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Attentional disorders (ADD) feature decreased attention span, impulsivity, and over-activity interfering with successful lives. Childhood onset ADD frequently persists to adulthood. Etiology may be hereditary or disease associated. Prevalence is 5% but recognition may be ‘overshadowed’ by comorbidities (brain injury, mood disorder) thereby escaping formal recognition. Blinded diagnosis by MRI has failed. ADD may not itself manifest a single anatomical pattern of brain abnormality but may reflect multiple, unique responses to numerous and diverse etiologies. Alternatively, a stable ADD-specific brain pattern may be better detected by brain physiology. EEG coherence, measuring cortical connectivity, is used to explore this possibility. METHODS: Participants: Ages 2 to 22 years; 347 ADD and 619 neurotypical controls (CON). Following artifact reduction, principal components analysis (PCA) identifies coherence factors with unique loading patterns. Discriminant function analysis (DFA) determines discrimination success differentiating ADD from CON. Split-half and jackknife analyses estimate prospective diagnostic success. Coherence factor loading constitutes an ADD-specific pattern or ‘connectome’.  RESULTS: PCA identified 40 factors explaining 50% of total variance. DFA on CON versus ADD groups utilizing all factors was highly significant (p≤0.0001). ADD subjects were separated into medication and comorbidity subgroups. DFA (stepping allowed) based on CON versus ADD without comorbidities or medication treatment successfully classified the correspondingly held out ADD subjects in every instance. Ten randomly generated split-half replications of the entire population demonstrated high-average classification success for each of the left out test-sets (overall: CON, 83.65%; ADD, 90.07%). Higher success was obtained with more restricted age sub-samples using jackknifing: 2-8 year olds (CON, 90.0%; ADD, 90.6%); 8-14 year olds (CON, 96.8%; ADD 95.9%); and 14-20 year-olds (CON, 100.0%; ADD, 97.1%). The connectome manifested decreased and increased coherence. Patterns were complex and bi-hemispheric; typically reported front-back and left-right loading patterns were not observed. Subtemporal electrodes (seldom utilized) were prominently involved.  CONCLUSIONS: Results demonstrate a stable coherence connectome differentiating ADD from CON subjects including subgroups with and without comorbidities and/or medications. This functional ‘connectome’, constitutes a diagnostic ADD phenotype. Split-half replications support potential for EEG-based ADD diagnosis, with increased accuracy using limited age ranges. Repeated studies could assist recognition of physiological change from interventions (pharmacological, behavioral). BioMed Central 2017-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5343416/ /pubmed/28274264 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12916-017-0805-9 Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Duffy, Frank H.
Shankardass, Aditi
McAnulty, Gloria B.
Als, Heidelise
A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title_full A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title_fullStr A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title_full_unstemmed A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title_short A unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
title_sort unique pattern of cortical connectivity characterizes patients with attention deficit disorders: a large electroencephalographic coherence study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5343416/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28274264
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12916-017-0805-9
work_keys_str_mv AT duffyfrankh auniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT shankardassaditi auniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT mcanultygloriab auniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT alsheidelise auniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT duffyfrankh uniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT shankardassaditi uniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT mcanultygloriab uniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy
AT alsheidelise uniquepatternofcorticalconnectivitycharacterizespatientswithattentiondeficitdisordersalargeelectroencephalographiccoherencestudy