| Literature DB >> 29977823 |
Lei Ye1, Ran Wei1, Xin Huang1,2, Wen-Qing Shi1, Qi-Chen Yang3, Qing Yuan1, Pei-Wen Zhu1, Nan Jiang1,3, Biao Li1, Qiong Zhou1, Fu-Qing Zhou4, Yi Shao1.
Abstract
This study investigated the changes in interhemispheric functional connectivity (FC) of the whole brain in open globe injury (OGI) patients, using voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity (VMHC), and their relationships with clinical features. Totally, 16 male and 2 female acute OGI patients and 18 sex, age, and education-matched healthy volunteers were enrolled in the study. All subjects were scanned through functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves analyses had been used to identify the VMHC in these brain areas could be used as biomarkers to distinguish OGI and from healthy control (HC). The mean VMHC values in multiple brain areas and clinical OGI manifestations were evaluated with a Pearson correlation analysis. OGI patients had significantly decreased VMHC in the bilateral calcarine/lingual/cuneus (BA18, 19, 30) and middle occipital gyrus (BA18, 19). The OGI patients had abnormal interhemispheric FC in the dorsal visual pathway, which may represent the pathophysiological mechanism that underlies acute vision loss after OGI.Entities:
Keywords: functional magnetic resonance imaging; resting state; unilateral acute open globe injury; voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity
Year: 2018 PMID: 29977823 PMCID: PMC6010377 DOI: 10.18240/ijo.2018.06.26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2222-3959 Impact factor: 1.779