| Literature DB >> 34321538 |
Rossana Mastrandrea1, Fabrizio Piras2, Andrea Gabrielli3,4, Nerisa Banaj2, Guido Caldarelli1,4, Gianfranco Spalletta5,6, Tommaso Gili1.
Abstract
Network neuroscience shed some light on the functional and structural modifications occurring to the brain associated with the phenomenology of schizophrenia. In particular, resting-state functional networks have helped our understanding of the illness by highlighting the global and local alterations within the cerebral organization. We investigated the robustness of the brain functional architecture in 44 medicated schizophrenic patients and 40 healthy comparators through an advanced network analysis of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data. The networks in patients showed more resistance to disconnection than in healthy controls, with an evident discrepancy between the two groups in the node degree distribution computed along a percolation process. Despite a substantial similarity of the basal functional organization between the two groups, the expected hierarchy of healthy brains' modular organization is crumbled in schizophrenia, showing a peculiar arrangement of the functional connections, characterized by several topologically equivalent backbones. Thus, the manifold nature of the functional organization's basal scheme, together with its altered hierarchical modularity, may be crucial in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. This result fits the disconnection hypothesis that describes schizophrenia as a brain disorder characterized by an abnormal functional integration among brain regions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34321538 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-94825-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379