| Literature DB >> 24613934 |
Peipeng Liang1, Zhihao Li2, Gopikrishna Deshpande3, Zhiqun Wang1, Xiaoping Hu2, Kuncheng Li1.
Abstract
Most neuroimaging studies of resting state networks in amnesic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) have concentrated on functional connectivity (FC) based on instantaneous correlation in a single network. The purpose of the current study was to investigate effective connectivity in aMCI patients based on Granger causality of four important networks at resting state derived from functional magnetic resonance imaging data--default mode network (DMN), hippocampal cortical memory network (HCMN), dorsal attention network (DAN) and fronto-parietal control network (FPCN). Structural and functional MRI data were collected from 16 aMCI patients and 16 age, gender-matched healthy controls. Correlation-purged Granger causality analysis was used, taking gray matter atrophy as covariates, to compare the group difference between aMCI patients and healthy controls. We found that the causal connectivity between networks in aMCI patients was significantly altered with both increases and decreases in the aMCI group as compared to healthy controls. Some alterations were significantly correlated with the disease severity as measured by mini-mental state examination (MMSE), and California verbal learning test (CVLT) scores. When the whole-brain signal averaged over the entire brain was used as a nuisance co-variate, the within-group maps were significantly altered while the between-group difference maps did not. These results suggest that the alterations in causal influences may be one of the possible underlying substrates of cognitive impairments in aMCI. The present study extends and complements previous FC studies and demonstrates the coexistence of causal disconnection and compensation in aMCI patients, and thus might provide insights into biological mechanism of the disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24613934 PMCID: PMC3948954 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0088476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographics and clinical findings.
| aMCI( | Controls( |
| |
| Sex, female/male | 10/6 | 10/6 | >0.99 |
| Age, year | 68.50±7.77 | 67.19±8.38 | 0.506 |
| Education, year | 10.06±3.91 | 9.06±3.64 | 0.857 |
| MMSEa | 25.94±1.65 | 28.56±0.63 | <0.05 |
| CVLT(immediate) | 8.39±1.23 | 11.33±1.86 | <0.05 |
| CVLT(short time) | 9.13±1.23 | 13.00±1.86 | <0.05 |
| CVLT(long-time) | 7.31±1.43 | 12.62±1.36 | <0.05 |
| CDT | 5.75±0.54 | 8.62±1.36 | <0.05 |
MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; values are means ± SD. WHO-UCLA CVLT, California verbal learning test; immediate, immediate recall of learning verbal; short-time, short time delayed free recall; long-time, long time delayed free recall; CDT, clock drawing test.
The p value was obtained using a Pearson x2 two-tailed test, with continuity correction for n<5.
* The p value was obtained by a two-sample two-tailed t-test.
The Talairach coordinates of the selected ROIs in DMN, HCMN, DAN and FPCN. The abbreviations are as described in the main text.
| Networks | Peak Talairach Coordinates | ||
| x | y | z | |
|
| |||
| PCC | −2 | −51 | 27 |
| L pIPL | −51 | −65 | 27 |
| R pIPL | 53 | −61 | 27 |
| OFC/vACC | −2 | 55 | −18 |
| dMPFC BA 8 | −16 | 49 | 38 |
| dMPFC BA 9 | 18 | 54 | 32 |
| L DLPFC | −44 | 20 | 41 |
| R DLPFC | 44 | 20 | 41 |
| L PHG | −12 | −35 | 0 |
| R PHG | 12 | −35 | 0 |
| L ITC | −58 | −18 | −14 |
| R ITC | 58 | −18 | −14 |
|
| |||
| L HF | −20 | −24 | −11 |
| R HF | 21 | −18 | −16 |
| vMPFC | −1 | 46 | 2 |
| PCC | 0 | −54 | 14 |
| L pIPL | −45 | −70 | 23 |
| R pIPL | 45 | −64 | 23 |
|
| |||
| L MT | −43 | −66 | −4 |
| R MT | 45 | −66 | −4 |
| L FEF | −25 | −13 | 48 |
| R FEF | 23 | 14 | 48 |
| L SPL | −27 | −55 | 50 |
| R SPL | 20 | −59 | 49 |
|
| |||
| L aPFC | −34 | 51 | 17 |
| R aPFC | 30 | 46 | 18 |
| dACC | 2 | 25 | 31 |
| L DLPFC | −48 | 14 | 35 |
| R DLPFC | 41 | 7 | 44 |
| L aINS | −30 | 18 | 5 |
| R aINS | 28 | 19 | 5 |
| L aIPL | −50 | −51 | 41 |
| R aIPL | 46 | −49 | 42 |
Figure 1The spatial distributions of 33 ROIs from DMN, HCMN, DAN and FPCN.
The coordinates of ROIs are shown in Table 2. The abbreviations are as described in the main text.
Figure 2Between group differences of causal connectivity: NC>aMCI.
The arrow of the significant causal paths represents the direction of the information flow, and the thickness represents the strength of the causal connectivity.
Figure 3Between group differences of causal connectivity: aMCI>NC.
The arrow of the significant causal paths represents the direction of the information flow, and the thickness represents the strength of the causal connectivity.
Figure 4Pathways (Blue = NC>aMCI; Red = aMCI>NC) showed significant correlation between causal connectivity and neuropsychological measures (including MMSE and CVLT) in aMCI group, and scatter plots of these associations.