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Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal

The assessment of task-independent functional connectivity (FC) after a lesion causing hemianopia remains an uncovered topic and represents a crucial point to better understand the neural basis of blindsight (i.e. unconscious visually triggered behavior) and visual awareness. In this light, we evalu...

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Autores principales: Pedersini, Caterina A., Guàrdia-Olmos, Joan, Montalà-Flaquer, Marc, Cardobi, Nicolò, Sanchez-Lopez, Javier, Parisi, Giorgia, Savazzi, Silvia, Marzi, Carlo A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6944357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31905211
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226816
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author Pedersini, Caterina A.
Guàrdia-Olmos, Joan
Montalà-Flaquer, Marc
Cardobi, Nicolò
Sanchez-Lopez, Javier
Parisi, Giorgia
Savazzi, Silvia
Marzi, Carlo A.
author_facet Pedersini, Caterina A.
Guàrdia-Olmos, Joan
Montalà-Flaquer, Marc
Cardobi, Nicolò
Sanchez-Lopez, Javier
Parisi, Giorgia
Savazzi, Silvia
Marzi, Carlo A.
author_sort Pedersini, Caterina A.
collection PubMed
description The assessment of task-independent functional connectivity (FC) after a lesion causing hemianopia remains an uncovered topic and represents a crucial point to better understand the neural basis of blindsight (i.e. unconscious visually triggered behavior) and visual awareness. In this light, we evaluated functional connectivity (FC) in 10 hemianopic patients and 10 healthy controls in a resting state paradigm. The main aim of this study is twofold: first of all we focused on the description and assessment of density and intensity of functional connectivity and network topology with and without a lesion affecting the visual pathway, and then we extracted and statistically compared network metrics, focusing on functional segregation, integration and specialization. Moreover, a study of 3-cycle triangles with prominent connectivity was conducted to analyze functional segregation calculated as the area of each triangle created connecting three neighboring nodes. To achieve these purposes we applied a graph theory-based approach, starting from Pearson correlation coefficients extracted from pairs of regions of interest. In these analyses we focused on the FC extracted by the whole brain as well as by four resting state networks: The Visual (VN), Salience (SN), Attention (AN) and Default Mode Network (DMN), to assess brain functional reorganization following the injury. The results showed a general decrease in density and intensity of functional connections, that leads to a less compact structure characterized by decrease in functional integration, segregation and in the number of interconnected hubs in both the Visual Network and the whole brain, despite an increase in long-range inter-modules connections (occipito-frontal connections). Indeed, the VN was the most affected network, characterized by a decrease in intra- and inter-network connections and by a less compact topology, with less interconnected nodes. Surprisingly, we observed a higher functional integration in the DMN and in the AN regardless of the lesion extent, that may indicate a functional reorganization of the brain following the injury, trying to compensate for the general reduced connectivity. Finally we observed an increase in functional specialization (lower between-network connectivity) and in inter-networks functional segregation, which is reflected in a less compact network topology, highly organized in functional clusters. These descriptive findings provide new insight on the spontaneous brain activity in hemianopic patients by showing an alteration in the intrinsic architecture of a large-scale brain system that goes beyond the impairment of a single RSN.
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spelling pubmed-69443572020-01-17 Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal Pedersini, Caterina A. Guàrdia-Olmos, Joan Montalà-Flaquer, Marc Cardobi, Nicolò Sanchez-Lopez, Javier Parisi, Giorgia Savazzi, Silvia Marzi, Carlo A. PLoS One Research Article The assessment of task-independent functional connectivity (FC) after a lesion causing hemianopia remains an uncovered topic and represents a crucial point to better understand the neural basis of blindsight (i.e. unconscious visually triggered behavior) and visual awareness. In this light, we evaluated functional connectivity (FC) in 10 hemianopic patients and 10 healthy controls in a resting state paradigm. The main aim of this study is twofold: first of all we focused on the description and assessment of density and intensity of functional connectivity and network topology with and without a lesion affecting the visual pathway, and then we extracted and statistically compared network metrics, focusing on functional segregation, integration and specialization. Moreover, a study of 3-cycle triangles with prominent connectivity was conducted to analyze functional segregation calculated as the area of each triangle created connecting three neighboring nodes. To achieve these purposes we applied a graph theory-based approach, starting from Pearson correlation coefficients extracted from pairs of regions of interest. In these analyses we focused on the FC extracted by the whole brain as well as by four resting state networks: The Visual (VN), Salience (SN), Attention (AN) and Default Mode Network (DMN), to assess brain functional reorganization following the injury. The results showed a general decrease in density and intensity of functional connections, that leads to a less compact structure characterized by decrease in functional integration, segregation and in the number of interconnected hubs in both the Visual Network and the whole brain, despite an increase in long-range inter-modules connections (occipito-frontal connections). Indeed, the VN was the most affected network, characterized by a decrease in intra- and inter-network connections and by a less compact topology, with less interconnected nodes. Surprisingly, we observed a higher functional integration in the DMN and in the AN regardless of the lesion extent, that may indicate a functional reorganization of the brain following the injury, trying to compensate for the general reduced connectivity. Finally we observed an increase in functional specialization (lower between-network connectivity) and in inter-networks functional segregation, which is reflected in a less compact network topology, highly organized in functional clusters. These descriptive findings provide new insight on the spontaneous brain activity in hemianopic patients by showing an alteration in the intrinsic architecture of a large-scale brain system that goes beyond the impairment of a single RSN. Public Library of Science 2020-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6944357/ /pubmed/31905211 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226816 Text en © 2020 Pedersini et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pedersini, Caterina A.
Guàrdia-Olmos, Joan
Montalà-Flaquer, Marc
Cardobi, Nicolò
Sanchez-Lopez, Javier
Parisi, Giorgia
Savazzi, Silvia
Marzi, Carlo A.
Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title_full Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title_fullStr Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title_full_unstemmed Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title_short Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal
title_sort functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: a graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fmri signal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6944357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31905211
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226816
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