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Archives of neurology · Jan 2011
Comparative StudyDeficits in functional connectivity of hippocampal and frontal lobe circuits after traumatic axonal injury.
- Carlos D Marquez de la Plata, Juanita Garces, Ehsan Shokri Kojori, Jack Grinnan, Kamini Krishnan, Rajesh Pidikiti, Jeffrey Spence, Michael D Devous, Carol Moore, Rodderick McColl, Christopher Madden, and Ramon Diaz-Arrastia.
- Center for Brain Health, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, USA.
- Arch. Neurol. 2011 Jan 1;68(1):74-84.
ObjectiveTo examine the functional connectivity of hippocampal and selected frontal lobe circuits in patients with traumatic axonal injury (TAI).DesignObservational study.SettingAn inpatient traumatic brain injury unit. Imaging and neurocognitive assessments were conducted in an outpatient research facility.ParticipantsTwenty-five consecutive patients with brain injuries consistent with TAI and acute subcortical white matter abnormalities were studied as well as 16 healthy volunteers of similar age and sex.InterventionsEcho-planar and high-resolution T1-weighted images were acquired using 3-T scanners. Regions of interest (ROI) were drawn bilaterally for the hippocampus, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and were used to extract time series data. Blood oxygenation level-dependent data from each ROI were used as reference functions for correlating with all other brain voxels. Interhemispheric functional connectivity was assessed for each participant by correlating homologous regions using a Pearson correlation coefficient. Patient functional and neurocognitive outcomes were assessed approximately 6 months after injury.Main Outcome MeasuresInterhemispheric functional connectivity, spatial patterns of functional connectivity, and associations of connectivity measures with functional and neurocognitive outcomes.ResultsPatients showed significantly lower interhemispheric functional connectivity for the hippocampus and ACC. Controls demonstrated stronger and more focused functional connectivity for the hippocampi and ACC, and a more focused recruitment of the default mode network for the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ROI. The interhemispheric functional connectivity for the hippocampus was correlated with delayed recall of verbal information.ConclusionsTraumatic axonal injury may affect interhemispheric neural activity, as patients with TAI show disrupted interhemispheric functional connectivity. More careful investigation of interhemispheric connectivity is warranted, as it demonstrated a modest association with outcome in chronic TBI.
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