Functional Connectivity as a Potential Mechanism for Language Plasticity

Neurology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 10.1212/WNL.0000000000013071
Author(s):  
Alyssa S Ailion ◽  
Xiaozhen You ◽  
Juma S Mbwana ◽  
Eleanor J. Fanto ◽  
Manu Krishnamurthy ◽  
...  

Background and Objectives:Task-fMRI is a clinical tool for language lateralization, but has limitations, and cannot provide information about network-level plasticity. Additional methods are needed to improve the precision of presurgical language mapping. We investigate language resting-state functional connectivity(RS fMRI;FC) in typically developing children and children with epilepsy. Our objectives were to: 1)Understand how FC components differ between typically developing (TD) children and those with epilepsy. 2)Elucidate how the location of disease (frontal/temporal epilepsy foci) effects FC. 3)Investigate the relationship between age and FC.Methods:Sample includes 55 TD children (mean age 12 years, range 7-18, and 31 patients with focal epilepsy (mean age 13) with same range. All subjects underwent RS fMRI. Using a bilateral canonical language map as target, vertex wise intra-hemispheric FC map and inter-hemispheric FC map for each subject were computed and thresholded at top 10% to compute an FC laterality index (FCLI;((L-R)/(L+R)) of the frontal and temporal regions for both integration (intra-hemispheric FC; FCLIi) and segregation (Inter-hemispheric FC; FCLIs) maps.Results:We found FC differences in the developing language network based on disease, seizure foci location, and age. Frontal and Temporal FCLIi was different between groups (t(84)=2.82, p<.01; t(84)=4.68, p<.01, respectively). Frontal epilepsy foci had the largest differences from TD (Cohen’s D Frontal FCLIi=0.84, FCLIs=0.51; Temporal FCLIi=1.29). Development and disease have opposing influences on the laterality of FC based on groups. In the frontal foci group, FCLIi decreased with age (r=-0.42), whereas in the temporal foci group FCLIi increased with age (r=0.40). Within the epilepsy group, increases in right frontal integration FCLI relates to increased right frontal task activation in our mostly left language dominant group (r=.52, p<.01). Language network connectivity is associated with higher verbal intelligence in children with epilepsy (r=.45, p<.05).Discussion:These findings lend preliminary evidence that FC reflects network plasticity in the form of adaptation and compensation, or the ability to recruit support and reallocate resources within and outside of the traditional network to compensate for disease. FC expands on task-based fMRI and provides complementary and potentially useful information about the language network that is not captured using task-based fMRI alone.

PsyCh Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 239-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui-ting Zhang ◽  
Tian-xiao Yang ◽  
Yi Wang ◽  
Yu-xiu Sui ◽  
Jing-jing Yao ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 461-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer N. Vega ◽  
Timothy J. Hohman ◽  
Jennifer R. Pryweller ◽  
Elisabeth M. Dykens ◽  
Tricia A. Thornton-Wells

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Varun Kumar ◽  
Rahul Garg

Many studies investigate the alterations in resting state functional connectivity in autism. Most of these studies focus on different regions of the brain to find the connectivity differ- ences between autism spectrum disorder and typically developing populations. The present review quantitatively extracts this data from all the seed based studies on autism spectrum disorder and uses it to build, for the first time, an Autism Altered Functional Connectome (AAFC) which summarizes the alterations in functional connectivity consistently reported in the literature. The data extracted from all the studies matching the inclusion criteria are presented at one place in human as well as a machine-readable format for further interpretation and analysis. Systematically reviewing 41 publications on 2818 subjects comprising 1459 typically developing and 1359 subjects with autism spectrum disorder, a total of 932 altered functional connectivity links were employed to construct an AAFC. The AAL atlas mapping of these links resulted in 71 replicated links of which 49 were consistent, and 574 unreplicated links that were reported just once. Out of 49, 38 were replicated across different non overlapping datasets. Majority of the studies analyzed the functional connectivity of the Default Mode Network (DMN) and its regions. Two important DMN regions, namely precuneus and posterior cingulate cortex were reported to exhibit different connectivity profiles with former majorly underconnected and later majorly overconnected consistently reported across multiple studies. After mapping the AAFLs to an atlas of brain networks, poor integration within DMN regions, and poor segregation of DMN regions with extra-DMN regions was observed. Keywords: Connectome, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Brain, Magnetic Resonance Imaging


Diabetes ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 67 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1889-P
Author(s):  
ALLISON L.B. SHAPIRO ◽  
SUSAN L. JOHNSON ◽  
BRIANNE MOHL ◽  
GRETA WILKENING ◽  
KRISTINA T. LEGGET ◽  
...  

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