| Literature DB >> 28607373 |
Angelique Van Ombergen1, Floris L Wuyts2, Ben Jeurissen3, Jan Sijbers3, Floris Vanhevel4, Steven Jillings1, Paul M Parizel4, Stefan Sunaert5, Paul H Van de Heyning1, Vincent Dousset6, Steven Laureys7, Athena Demertzi7,8.
Abstract
Spaceflight severely impacts the human body. However, little is known about how gravity and gravitational alterations affect the human brain. Here, we aimed at measuring the effects of acute exposure to gravity transitions. We exposed 28 naïve participants to repetitive alterations between normal, hyper- and microgravity induced by a parabolic flight (PF) and measured functional MRI connectivity changes. Scans were acquired before and after the PF. To mitigate motion sickness, PF participants received scopolamine prior to PF. To account for the scopolamine effects, 12 non-PF controls were scanned prior to and after scopolamine injection. Changes in functional connectivity were explored with the Intrinsic Connectivity Contrast (ICC). Seed-based analysis on the regions exhibiting localized changes was subsequently performed to understand the networks associated with the identified nodes. We found that the PF group was characterized by lower ICC scores in the right temporo-parietal junction (rTPJ), an area involved in multisensory integration and spatial tasks. The encompassed network revealed PF-related decreases in within- and inter-hemispheric anticorrelations between the rTPJ and the supramarginal gyri, indicating both altered vestibular and self-related functions. Our findings shed light on how the brain copes with gravity transitions, on gravity internalization and are relevant for the understanding of bodily self-consciousness.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28607373 PMCID: PMC5468234 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-03170-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flight trajectory during the parabolic manoeuvre.
Subjective ratings on the Positive and Negative Affect Scale, the Epworth Sleepiness questionnaire, Motion Sickness Assessment Questionnaire and Misery Scale scores (mean (SD)).
| Pre flight (n = 24) | During flight* (n = 24) | Post flight (n = 24) | Pre scop (n = 12) | During scop (n = 12) | Post-scop (n = 12) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PANAS, Positive Affect subscale | 35 (4) | 35 (6) | 32 (6) | 29 (7) | ||
| PANAS, Negative Affect subscale | 16 (4) | 12 (5) | 12 (2) | 11 (1) | ||
| Epworth Sleepiness Scale | 7 (3) | 8 (5) | 6 (3) | 9 (4) | ||
| MSAQ, total (in %) | 23 (17) | 22 (8) | ||||
| MSAQ, central subscale (in %) | 20 (16) | 27 (14) | ||||
| MSAQ, sopite-related subscale (in %) | 22 (20) | 31 (15) | ||||
| MSAQ, gastro-intestinal subscale (in %) | 29 (27) | 17 (7) | ||||
| MSAQ, peripheral subscale (in %) | 20 (18) | 15 (6) | ||||
| Misery Scale score | 0.5 (0.8) | 1.2 (1.3) | 0.5 (0.8) | 0.0 (0.0) | 1.0 (0.2) | 0.5 (0.7) |
MSAQ: Motion Sickness Assessment Questionnaire; PANAS: Positive and Negative Affect Scale; PF: parabolic flight; scop: scopolamine; SD: standard deviation.
*Averaged over the 5 assessments during the flight.
Figure 2Group-level explorative analysis was performed to localize modifications in global connectivity before and after participation to the parabolic flight (n = 28) and before and after scopolamine intake in the non-parabolic flight group (n = 12). The spatial patterns represent average maps of higher (red) and lower (blue) intrinsic connectivity contrast scores, with a greater score representing greater average strength of the correlations in a given voxel. Statistical maps are rendered on a surface template and are thresholded at cluster-level family wise error rate p < 0.05 (two-sided, permutation testing).
Figure 3The hypothesis-free exploration of connectivity changes points to the right angular gyrus/temporo-parietal junction as the region with lower scores on the intrinsic connectivity contract, implying that this region has decreased participation in whole-brain connectivity at post-flight scan. The map represents the results of the conjunction analysis, suggesting that the effect can be attributed to the parabolic flight group as compared to the non-parabolic flight control group. Bars indicate effect sizes (beta values) and error bars 90% CI in the same cluster.
Figure 4The networks encompassed by the right angular gyrus/temporo-parietal junction in the parabolic flight group. The default mode network (DMN; red) and the DMN anticorrelated regions (blue) were the set of areas that were functionally connected with the right angular gyrus at pre- and post-flight. The between-condition differences in the encompassed networks included fewer anticorrelations with bilateral supramarginal gyri. The statistical maps are rendered on a surface template and have been thresholded at cluster-level family wise error rate p < 0.05 (permutation tests). Bars indicate cluster-level effect sizes (beta values) and error bars 90% CI.