| Literature DB >> 35341016 |
Eugenia Conti1, Elena Scaffei1,2, Chiara Bosetti1, Viviana Marchi1, Valeria Costanzo1, Valerio Dell'Oste3, Raffaele Mazziotti1, Liliana Dell'Osso3, Claudia Carmassi3, Filippo Muratori1,3, Laura Baroncelli1,4, Sara Calderoni1,3, Roberta Battini1,3.
Abstract
Accumulating evidence suggests that functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) can provide an essential bridge between our current understanding of neural circuit organization and cortical activity in the developing brain. Indeed, fNIRS allows studying brain functions through the measurement of neurovascular coupling that links neural activity to subsequent changes in cerebral blood flow and hemoglobin oxygenation levels. While the literature offers a multitude of fNIRS applications to typical development, only recently this tool has been extended to the study of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). The exponential rise of scientific publications on this topic during the last years reflects the interest to identify a "fNIRS signature" as a biomarker of high translational value to support both early clinical diagnosis and treatment outcome. The purpose of this systematic review is to describe the updating clinical applications of fNIRS in NDDs, with a specific focus on preschool population. Starting from this rationale, a systematic search was conducted for relevant studies in different scientific databases (Pubmed, Scopus, and Web of Science) resulting in 13 published articles. In these studies, fNIRS was applied in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) or infants at high risk of developing ASD. Both functional connectivity in resting-state conditions and task-evoked brain activation using multiple experimental paradigms were used in the selected investigations, suggesting that fNIRS might be considered a promising method for identifying early quantitative biomarkers in the autism field.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; fNIRS; functional neuroimaging; high-risk infant; near-infrared spectroscopy; neurodevelopmental disorders; preschooler
Year: 2022 PMID: 35341016 PMCID: PMC8948464 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.785993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Flow diagram of the literature search and subsequent screening performed in this review.
Overview of the reviewed studies using Resting State (R-S) fNIRS recordings: references, technical issues, characteristics of participants as well as main findings are shown.
| References | NIRS technique | Experimental paradigm | Characteristics of participants | Main findings | |||
| First Author, year | System | Channels (N) | Probe Geometry Source: Detector (cortical areas covered) | Experimental setting “trick” for Resting-State recording | Clinical population N (M:F) Mean age | Comparison group N (M:F) Mean age | |
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| Foire 3000, (Shimadzu Kyoto, Japan) | 2 | 2:1 optodes probe (covering anterior prefrontal cortex, bilaterally) | R-S fNIRS measurement while watching picture-card show | ASD 15 (13:2) 45–82 months^ | TD 15 (13:2) 47–86 months^ | Higher anterior prefrontal cortex (PFC) connectivity for 0.02-Hz fluctuations in children with ASD compared to TD group. Inter-hemispheric connectivity in ASD group positively correlated with the severity of social deficit. |
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| LABNIRS (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) | 44 | 16:16 optodes probe (covering prefrontal, temporal and occipital areas, bilaterally) | R-S fNIRS measurement while watching cartoon | ASD 12 (9:3) 6.1 years | TD 12 (9:3) 6.1 years | Weak functional network efficiency in young children with ASD compared to TD group. In particular, weak lobe-level inter – region connectivity in right prefrontal cortex (including its linkages with left prefrontal cortex and bilateral temporal cortex) was found. |
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| LABNIRS (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) | 44 | 16:16 optodes probe (covering prefrontal, temporal and occipital areas, bilaterally) | R-S fNIRS measurement while watching cartoon | ASD 46 (36:10) 5 years | n.a. | Significant associations between age and network efficiency, especially evident in the deoxy- and total-Hb-based-networks, indicating the network efficiency decreases with age in young ASD children. Significant associations between levels of autistic behaviors and network efficiency in the oxy-Hb-based-network, indicating decreased functional global and local network efficiency in ASDs with a relatively higher level of autistic behaviors. |
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| LABNIRS (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) | 44 | 16:16 optodes probe (covering prefrontal, temporal and occipital areas, bilaterally) | R-S fNIRS measurement while watching cartoon | ASD 29 (23:9) 6 years | TD 29 (20:9) 6.5 years | Spatial complexity of functional connectivity (SCFC) differs between ASD and control group. Global SCFC was significantly higher in ASDs, along with considerably higher intraregion SCFCs in the prefrontal and temporal lobes. Moreover, higher interregion SCFCs between right PFC and the other brain regions were found in young children with ASD compared to TD children. |
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| LABNIRS (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) | 44 | 16:16 optodes probe (covering prefrontal, temporal and occipital areas, bilaterally) | R-S fNIRS measurement while watching cartoon | ASD 35 (23:12) 5.9 years | TD 31 (20:11) 6.6 years | The long-range temporal correlations (LRTCs) of hemoglobin concentration signals were attenuated in young children with ASD over left temporal region (for oxy-Hb signal) and bilateral temporo-occipital regions (for deoxy-Hb signal). Detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA), used to quantify LRTCs, of oxy-Hb in left temporal region were negatively correlated with autistic symptom severity. Relationship between age and LRTCs of Hb concentration signals differs between two groups, correlating with autistic symptom severity. |
^ Sample mean age not available: age range of participants is shown.
N.A. means not applicable: no comparison group is included in this study.
Overview of the reviewed studies using Task-Related (T-R) fNIRS recordings: references, technical issues, characteristics of participants as well as main findings are shown.
| References | NIRS technique | fNIRS paradigm | Demographics | Main findings | |||
| First Author, year | System | Channels (N) | Probe Geometry Source: Detector (cortical areas covered) | Type of stimuli proposed in Task-Related (T-R) protocol | Clinical population N (M:F) Mean age | Comparison group N (M:F) Mean age | |
|
| Hitachi ETG-4000 system | 24 | Two arrays of optodes probe: -Frontal areas (OFC), bilaterally (Ch 1-12) -Temporal lateral areas, only in right hemisphere (Ch 13-24) | Face processing task | HR 10 (4:6) 7 months | LR 10 (4:6) 6.9 months | Greater OxyHb responses in lateral regions for LR as compared to HR, and significantly greater DeoxyHb responses in frontal channels for HR as compared to LR during face processing task. Greater DeoxyHb response to mother’s face as opposed to stranger face within the HR group across both frontal and lateral regions. Greater OxyHb response to smiling versus neutral conditions only for the LR. |
| Lloyd- | UCL-NIRS topography system | 26 | 10:10 optodes probe (covering temporal areas, as IFG, pSTS-TPJ and aMTG-STG, bilaterally) | Social perception task | HR 18 (8:10) * 5 months | LR 16 (10:6) * 5 months | Visual social stimuli produced a diminished response in HR infants relative to LR infants, with difference mostly evident in the left STS region of the cortex. Regarding auditory social stimuli, no vocal-specialized areas in HR group was found, compared to greater vocal selectivity in the right mid-posterior STS region in LR group. |
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| UCL-NIRS topography system | 26 | 10:10 optodes probe (covering temporal areas, as IFG, pSTS-TPJ and aMTG-STG, bilaterally) | Social perception task | HR^ 20 (10:10) * 5 months | LR 16 (10:6) * 5 months | Early fNIRS measurements (4–6 months) in response to social perception task correlate with later clinical outcome and symptoms level at 36 months. Reduced activation to visual social stimuli in those infants with later diagnosis of ASD. Reduced activation to vocal relative to non-vocal sounds in those infants with later diagnosis of ASD compared to LR and HR-without later diagnosis confirmation. |
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| UCL-NIRS topography system | 26 | 10:10 optodes probe (covering temporal areas, as IFG, pSTS-TPJ and aMTG-STG, bilaterally) | Social perception task | HR 16 (7:9) 5 months | LR 13 (9:4) 5 months | LR showed a socially selective cortical response in the right posterior temporal cortex in response to visual social stimuli, whereas this response was not significant in the HR. |
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| Hitachi ETG-4000 system | 24 | 10:8 optodes probe (covering temporal areas, bilaterally) | Naturalistic social interactions | HR 9 (7:2) 7 months | LR 6 (1:5) 7.5 months | HR infants showed reduced right and left-hemispheric activation compared to LR infants based on OxyHb and DeoxyHb signal trends. Indeed, HR infants had greater functional connectivity than LR infants during the pre- and post-social periods and showed a drop in connectivity during the social period. |
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| Hitachi ETG-4000 system | 24 | 10:8 optode probe (covering anterior and posterior temporal areas, bilaterally) | Language-related task | HR 27° | LR 37° | In a prospective longitudinal view, LR infants showed a pattern of increasing functional connectivity from 3- to 12-months in selected ROIs, while HR exhibited a pattern of decreasing connectivity with age. At 12-months, HR have reduced intra-hemispheric connectivity for the left hemisphere compared to LR infants. |
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| Hitachi ETG-4000 system | 24 | 10:8 optode probe (covering anterior and posterior temporal areas, bilaterally) | Language-related task | HR 21 (13:8) 3.6 months | LR 17 (10:7) 3.6 months | During an auditory stimuli containing syllable repetitions (ABB vs. ABC syllables pattern), HR females exhibited significantly higher OxyHb responses than HR males, LR females or LR males in both left and right anterior regions. HR females exhibited different temporal neural response patterns than LR females across both ABB and ABC stimuli pattern (no habituation response to repetition in speech in HR females group). |
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| Hitachi ETG-4000 system | 24 | 10:8 optode probe (covering anterior and posterior temporal areas, bilaterally) | Language-related task | HR^ 14 (7:7) 7 months | LR 18 (9:9) 7 months | LR infants exhibited strongest activation in bilateral anterior ROIs, while HR exhibited similar activation across all brain regions in study. Compared to LRs, HR-ASD infants had reduced brain response in the bilateral anterior ROIs, while HR-noASD had increased brain response in the right posterior ROI. This atypical brain response was not predictive of 24-month language abilities in HR infants. |
*Note that 32 of the 36 infants (16 low risk and 16 high risk) contributed data to a previous publication (Lloyd-
°Longitudinal Study: 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12- months visit; variable gender ratio according to timepoint.
^Longitudinal data outcome available: within HR cohort of