journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38422833/a-whole-brain-neuromark-resting-state-fmri-analysis-of-first-episode-and-early-psychosis-evidence-of-aberrant-cortical-subcortical-cerebellar-functional-circuitry
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kyle M Jensen, Vince D Calhoun, Zening Fu, Kun Yang, Andreia V Faria, Koko Ishizuka, Akira Sawa, Pablo Andrés-Camazón, Brian A Coffman, Dylan Seebold, Jessica A Turner, Dean F Salisbury, Armin Iraji
Psychosis (including symptoms of delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized conduct/speech) is a main feature of schizophrenia and is frequently present in other major psychiatric illnesses. Studies in individuals with first-episode (FEP) and early psychosis (EP) have the potential to interpret aberrant connectivity associated with psychosis during a period with minimal influence from medication and other confounds. The current study uses a data-driven whole-brain approach to examine patterns of aberrant functional network connectivity (FNC) in a multi-site dataset comprising resting-state functional magnetic resonance images (rs-fMRI) from 117 individuals with FEP or EP and 130 individuals without a psychiatric disorder, as controls...
February 28, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38422831/transient-resting-state-salience-limbic-co-activation-patterns-in-functional-neurological-disorders
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha Weber, Janine Bühler, Serafeim Loukas, Thomas A W Bolton, Giorgio Vanini, Rupert Bruckmaier, Selma Aybek
BACKGROUND: Functional neurological disorders were historically regarded as the manifestation of a dynamic brain lesion which might be linked to trauma or stress, although this association has not yet been directly tested yet. Analysing large-scale brain network dynamics at rest in relation to stress biomarkers assessed by salivary cortisol and amylase could provide new insights into the pathophysiology of functional neurological symptoms. METHODS: Case-control resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study of 79 patients with mixed functional neurological disorders (i...
February 28, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38428325/behavioral-and-neuroanatomical-correlates-of-facial-emotion-processing-in-post-stroke-depression
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janusz L Koob, Maximilian Gorski, Sebastian Krick, Maike Mustin, Gereon R Fink, Christian Grefkes, Anne K Rehme
BACKGROUND: Emotion processing deficits are known to accompany depressive symptoms and are often seen in stroke patients. Little is known about the influence of post-stroke depressive (PSD) symptoms and specific brain lesions on altered emotion processing abilities and how these phenomena develop over time. This potential relationship may impact post-stroke rehabilitation of neurological and psychosocial function. To address this scientific gap, we investigated the relationship between PSD symptoms and emotion processing abilities in a longitudinal study design from the first days post-stroke into the early chronic phase...
February 27, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38401459/subtle-microstructural-alterations-in-white-matter-tracts-involved-in-socio-emotional-processing-after-very-preterm-birth
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ward Deferm, Tiffany Tang, Matthijs Moerkerke, Nicky Daniels, Jean Steyaert, Kaat Alaerts, Els Ortibus, Gunnar Naulaers, Bart Boets
Children born very preterm (VPT, < 32 weeks of gestation) have an increased risk of developing socio-emotional difficulties. Possible neural substrates for these socio-emotional difficulties are alterations in the structural connectivity of the social brain due to premature birth. The objective of the current study was to study microstructural white matter integrity in VPT versus full-term (FT) born school-aged children along twelve white matter tracts involved in socio-emotional processing. Diffusion MRI scans were obtained from a sample of 35 VPT and 38 FT 8-to-12-year-old children...
February 19, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38447413/conflict-monitoring-and-emotional-processing-in-3-4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine-mdma-and-methamphetamine-users-a-comparative-neurophysiological-study
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antje Opitz, Josua Zimmermann, David M Cole, Rebecca C Coray, Anna Zachäi, Markus R Baumgartner, Andrea E Steuer, Maximilian Pilhatsch, Boris B Quednow, Christian Beste, Ann-Kathrin Stock
In stimulant use and addiction, conflict control processes are crucial for regulating substance use and sustaining abstinence, which can be particularly challenging in social-affective situations. Users of methamphetamine (METH, "Ice") and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, "Ecstasy") both experience impulse control deficits, but display different social-affective and addictive profiles. We thus aimed to compare the effects of chronic use of the substituted amphetamines METH and MDMA on conflict control processes in different social-affective contexts (i...
February 15, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38367597/disbalanced-recruitment-of-crossed-and-uncrossed-cerebello-thalamic-pathways-during-deep-brain-stimulation-is-predictive-of-delayed-therapy-escape-in-essential-tremor
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bastian E A Sajonz, Marvin L Frommer, Marco Reisert, Ganna Blazhenets, Nils Schröter, Alexander Rau, Thomas Prokop, Peter C Reinacher, Michel Rijntjes, Horst Urbach, Philipp T Meyer, Volker A Coenen
BACKGROUND: Thalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an efficacious treatment for drug-resistant essential tremor (ET) and the dentato-rubro-thalamic tract (DRT) constitutes an important target structure. However, up to 40% of patients habituate and lose treatment efficacy over time, frequently accompanied by a stimulation-induced cerebellar syndrome. The phenomenon termed delayed therapy escape (DTE) is insufficiently understood. Our previous work showed that DTE clinically is pronounced on the non-dominant side and suggested that differential involvement of crossed versus uncrossed DRT (DRTx/DRTu) might play a role in DTE development...
February 12, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38354671/lesion-mapping-and-functional-characterization-of-hemiplegic-children-with-different-patterns-of-hand-manipulation
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antonino Errante, Francesca Bozzetti, Alessandro Piras, Laura Beccani, Mariacristina Filippi, Stefania Costi, Adriano Ferrari, Leonardo Fogassi
Brain damage in children with unilateral cerebral palsy (UCP) affects motor function, with varying severity, making it difficult the performance of daily actions. Recently, qualitative and semi-quantitative methods have been developed for lesion classification, but studies on mild to moderate hand impairment are lacking. The present study aimed to characterize lesion topography and preserved brain areas in UCP children with specific patterns of hand manipulation. A homogeneous sample of 16 UCP children, aged 9 to 14 years, was enrolled in the study...
February 10, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38346380/aberrant-brain-dynamics-of-large-scale-functional-networks-across-schizophrenia-and-mood-disorder
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takuya Ishida, Shinichi Yamada, Kasumi Yasuda, Shinya Uenishi, Atsushi Tamaki, Michiyo Tabata, Natsuko Ikeda, Shun Takahashi, Sohei Kimoto
INTRODUCTION: The dynamics of large-scale networks, which are known as distributed sets of functionally synchronized brain regions and include the visual network (VIN), somatomotor network (SMN), dorsal attention network (DAN), salience network (SAN), limbic network (LIN), frontoparietal network (FPN), and default mode network (DMN), play important roles in emotional and cognitive processes in humans. Although disruptions in these large-scale networks are considered critical for the pathophysiological mechanisms of psychiatric disorders, their role in psychiatric disorders remains unknown...
February 10, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38330816/correspondence-inaccurate-reference-leads-to-tripling-of-reported-fnd-prevalence
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
• Perez et al asserted that FND is the "2nd most common" diagnosis in outpatient neurology. • Stone et al (2010), cited by Perez et al, does not support the “2nd most common” claim. • In Stone et al, a broad “functional/psychological” category was the second most common. • FND is not synonymous with the “functional/psychological” category in Stone et al.
February 7, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38471435/longitudinal-prognosis-of-parkinson-s-outcomes-using-causal-connectivity
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cooper J Mellema, Kevin P Nguyen, Alex Treacher, Aixa X Andrade, Nader Pouratian, Vibhash D Sharma, Padraig O'Suileabhain, Albert A Montillo
Despite the prevalence of Parkinson's disease (PD), there are no clinically-accepted neuroimaging biomarkers to predict the trajectory of motor or cognitive decline or differentiate Parkinson's disease from atypical progressive parkinsonian diseases. Since abnormal connectivity in the motor circuit and basal ganglia have been previously shown as early markers of neurodegeneration, we hypothesize that patterns of interregional connectivity could be useful to form patient-specific predictive models of disease state and of PD progression...
February 6, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38309187/response-to-the-letter-concerning-the-publication-neuroimaging-in-functional-neurological-disorder-state-of-the-field-and-research-agenda-perez-dl-et-al-neuroimage-clin-2021-30-102623
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David L Perez, Timothy R Nicholson, Ali A Asadi-Pooya, Matthew Butler, Alan J Carson, Anthony S David, Quinton Deeley, Ibai Diez, Mark J Edwards, Alberto J Espay, Jeannette M Gelauff, Johannes Jungilligens, Mark Hallett, Richard A A Kanaan, Marina A J Tijssen, Kasia Kozlowska, W Curt LaFrance, Ramesh S Marapin, Carine W Maurer, Antje A T S Reinders, Petr Sojka, Jeffrey P Staab, Jon Stone, Jerzy P Szaflarski, Selma Aybek
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 30, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38309186/prenatal-alcohol-exposure-and-white-matter-microstructural-changes-across-the-first-6-7%C3%A2-years-of-life-a-longitudinal-diffusion-tensor-imaging-study-of-a-south-african-birth-cohort
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
K A Donald, C J Hendrikse, A Roos, C J Wedderburn, S Subramoney, J E Ringshaw, L Bradford, N Hoffman, T Burd, K L Narr, R P Woods, H J Zar, S H Joshi, D J Stein
Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) can affect brain development in early life, but few studies have investigated the effects of PAE on trajectories of white matter tract maturation in young children. Here we used diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) repeated over three time points, to measure the effects of PAE on patterns of white matter microstructural development during the pre-school years. Participants were drawn from the Drakenstein Child Health Study (DCHS), an ongoing birth cohort study conducted in a peri-urban community in the Western Cape, South Africa...
January 28, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38309185/disrupted-third-visual-pathway-function-in-schizophrenia-evidence-from-real-and-implied-motion-processing
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antígona Martínez, Pablo A Gaspar, Dalton H Bermudez, M Belen Aburto-Ponce, Odeta Beggel, Daniel C Javitt
Impaired motion perception in schizophrenia has been associated with deficits in social-cognitive processes and with reduced activation of visual sensory regions, including the middle temporal area (MT+) and posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS). These findings are consistent with the recent proposal of the existence of a specific 'third visual pathway' specialized for social perception in which motion is a fundamental component. The third visual pathway transmits visual information from early sensory visual processing areas to the STS, with MT+ acting as a critical intermediary...
January 26, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38281363/characterizing-upper-extremity-fine-motor-function-in-the-presence-of-white-matter-hyperintensities-a-7%C3%A2-t-mri-cross-sectional-study-in-older-adults
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Riccardo Iandolo, Esin Avci, Giulia Bommarito, Ioanna Sandvig, Gitta Rohweder, Axel Sandvig
BACKGROUND: White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are a prevalent radiographic finding in the aging brain studies. Research on WMH association with motor impairment is mostly focused on the lower-extremity function and further investigation on the upper-extremity is needed. How different degrees of WMH burden impact the network of activation recruited during upper limb motor performance could provide further insight on the complex mechanisms of WMH pathophysiology and its interaction with aging and neurological disease processes...
January 24, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38280310/progressive-lesion-necrosis-is-related-to-increasing-aphasia-severity-in-chronic-stroke
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa Johnson, Roger Newman-Norlund, Alex Teghipco, Chris Rorden, Leonardo Bonilha, Julius Fridriksson
BACKGROUND: Volumetric investigations of cortical damage resulting from stroke indicate that lesion size and shape continue to change even in the chronic stage of recovery. However, the potential clinical relevance of continued lesion growth has yet to be examined. In the present study, we investigated the prevalence of lesion expansion and the relationship between expansion and changes in aphasia severity in a large sample of individuals in the chronic stage of aphasia recovery. METHODS: Retrospective structural MRI scans from 104 S survivors with at least 2 observations (k = 301 observations; mean time between scans = 31 months) were included...
January 20, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38271852/relationships-among-the-gut-microbiome-brain-networks-and-symptom-severity-in-schizophrenia-patients-a-mediation-analysis
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liqin Liang, Shijia Li, Yuanyuan Huang, Jing Zhou, Dongsheng Xiong, Shaochuan Li, Hehua Li, Baoyuan Zhu, Xiaobo Li, Yuping Ning, Xiaohui Hou, Fengchun Wu, Kai Wu
The microbiome-gut-brain axis (MGBA) plays a critical role in schizophrenia (SZ). However, the underlying mechanisms of the interactions among the gut microbiome, brain networks, and symptom severity in SZ patients remain largely unknown. Fecal samples, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data, and Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) scores were collected from 38 SZ patients and 38 normal controls, respectively. The data of 16S rRNA gene sequencing were used to analyze the abundance of gut microbiome and the analysis of human brain networks was applied to compute the nodal properties of 90 brain regions...
January 17, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38237270/obesity-surgery-and-neural-correlates-of-human-eating-behaviour-a-systematic-review-of-functional-mri-studies
#37
REVIEW
Shahd Alabdulkader, Alhanouf S Al-Alsheikh, Alexander D Miras, Anthony P Goldstone
Changes in eating behaviour including reductions in appetite and food intake, and healthier food cue reactivity, reward, hedonics and potentially also preference, contribute to weight loss and its health benefits after obesity surgery. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been increasingly used to interrogate the neural correlates of eating behaviour in obesity, including brain reward-cognitive systems, changes after obesity surgery, and links with alterations in the gut-hormone-brain axis. Neural responses to food cues can be measured by changes in blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal in brain regions involved in reward processing, including caudate, putamen, nucleus accumbens, insula, amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex, and top-down inhibitory control, including dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC)...
January 12, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38241755/delineating-the-impact-of-childhood-traumatic-brain-injury-tbi-on-long-term-depressive-symptom-severity-does-sub-acute-brain-morphometry-prospectively-predict-2-year-outcome
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas P Ryan, Dawn Koester, Louise Crossley, Edith Botchway, Stephen Hearps, Cathy Catroppa, Vicki Anderson
Despite evidence of a link between childhood TBI and heightened risk for depressive symptoms, very few studies have examined early risk factors that predict the presence and severity of post-injury depression beyond 1-year post injury. This longitudinal prospective study examined the effect of mild-severe childhood TBI on depressive symptom severity at 2-years post-injury. It also evaluated the potential role of sub-acute brain morphometry and executive function (EF) in prospectively predicting these long-term outcomes...
January 9, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38218081/altered-task-related-decoupling-of-the-rostral-anterior-cingulate-cortex-in-depression
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine A Leonards, Ben J Harrison, Alec J Jamieson, James Agathos, Trevor Steward, Christopher G Davey
Dysfunctional activity of the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) - an extensively connected hub region of the default mode network - has been broadly linked to cognitive and affective impairments in depression. However, the nature of aberrant task-related rACC suppression in depression is incompletely understood. In this study, we sought to characterize functional connectivity of rACC activity suppression ('deactivation') - an essential feature of rACC function - during external task engagement in depression...
January 8, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38215622/comparing-the-efficacy-of-awake-and-sedated-meg-to-tms-in-mapping-hand-sensorimotor-cortex-in-a-clinical-cohort
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Negar Noorizadeh, Jackie Austin Varner, Liliya Birg, Theresa Williard, Roozbeh Rezaie, James Wheless, Shalini Narayana
Non-invasive methods such as Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) aid in the pre-surgical evaluation of patients with epilepsy or brain tumor to identify sensorimotor cortices. MEG requires sedation in children or patients with developmental delay. However, TMS can be applied to awake patients of all ages with any cognitive abilities. In this study, we compared the efficacy of TMS with MEG (in awake and sedated states) in identifying the hand sensorimotor areas in patients with epilepsy or brain tumors...
January 8, 2024: NeuroImage: Clinical
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