| Literature DB >> 33686216 |
Thomas J Vanasse1, Peter T Fox2,3,4, P Mickle Fox5, Franco Cauda6, Tommaso Costa6, Stephen M Smith7, Simon B Eickhoff8,9, Jack L Lancaster5,10.
Abstract
Network architecture is a brain-organizational motif present across spatial scales from cell assemblies to distributed systems. Structural pathology in some neurodegenerative disorders selectively afflicts a subset of functional networks, motivating the network degeneration hypothesis (NDH). Recent evidence suggests that structural pathology recapitulating physiology may be a general property of neuropsychiatric disorders. To test this possibility, we compared functional and structural network meta-analyses drawing upon the BrainMap database. The functional meta-analysis included results from >7,000 experiments of subjects performing >100 task paradigms; the structural meta-analysis included >2,000 experiments of patients with >40 brain disorders. Structure-function network concordance was high: 68% of networks matched (pFWE < 0.01), confirming the broader scope of NDH. This correspondence persisted across higher model orders. A positive linear association between disease and behavioral entropy (p = 0.0006;R2 = 0.53) suggests nodal stress as a common mechanism. Corroborating this interpretation with independent data, we show that metabolic 'cost' significantly differs along this transdiagnostic/multimodal gradient.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33686216 PMCID: PMC7940476 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-01832-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642