From brain connectivity to cognitive function: Dissecting the salience network in pediatric BECTS-ESES

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Ahmed Ameen Fateh , Abla Smahi , Muhammad Hassan , Tong Mo , Zhanqi Hu , Adam A.Q. Mohammed , Yan Hu , Cristina Cañete Massé , Li Chen , Yan Chen , Jianxiang Liao , Hongwu Zeng
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BECTS), a common pediatric epilepsy, may lead to cognitive decline when compounded by Electrical Status Epilepticus during Sleep (ESES). Emerging evidence suggests that disruptions in the Salience Network (SN) contribute significantly to the cognitive deficits observed in BECTS-ESES. Our study rigorously investigates the dynamic functional connectivity (dFC) within the SN and its correlation with cognitive impairments in BECTS-ESES, employing advanced neuroimaging and neuropsychological assessments.

Methods

In this research, 45 patients diagnosed with BECTS-ESES and 55 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) participated. We utilized resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and Independent Component Analysis (ICA) to identify three fundamental SN nodes: the right Anterior Insula (rAI), left Anterior Insula (lAI), and the Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC). A two-sample t-test facilitated the comparison of dFC between these pivotal regions and other brain areas.

Results

Significantly, the BECTS-ESES group demonstrated increased dFC, particularly between the ACC and the right Middle Occipital Gyrus, and from the rAI to the right Superior Parietal Gyrus and Cerebellum, and from the lAI to the left Postcentral Gyrus. Such dFC augmentations provide neural insights potentially explaining the neuropsychological deficits in BECTS-ESES children. Employing comprehensive neuropsychological evaluations, we mapped these dFC disruptions to specific cognitive impairments encompassing memory, executive functioning, language, and attention. Through multiple regression analysis and path analysis, a preliminary but compelling association was discovered linking dFC disturbances directly to cognitive impairments. These findings underscore the critical role of SN disruptions in BECTS-ESES cognitive dysfunctions.

Limitation

Our cross-sectional design and analytic methods preclude definitive mediation models and causal inferences, leaving the precise nature of dFC's mediating role and its direct impact by BECTS-ESES partially unresolved. Future longitudinal and confirmatory studies are needed to comprehensively delineate these associations.

Conclusion

Our study heralds dFC within the SN as a vital biomarker for cognitive impairment in pediatric epilepsy, advocating for targeted cognitive-specific interventions in managing BECTS-ESES. The preliminary nature of our findings invites further studies to substantiate these associations, offering profound implications for the prognosis and therapeutic strategies in BECTS-ESES, thereby underlining the importance of this research in the field of pediatric neurology and epilepsy management.

从大脑连接到认知功能:剖析小儿 BECTS-ESES 的显著性网络。
背景:儿童良性癫痫伴心颞区棘波(BECTS)是一种常见的小儿癫痫,如果再加上睡眠中电癫痫状态(ESES),可能会导致认知能力下降。新的证据表明,显著性网络(SN)的破坏在很大程度上导致了在 BECTS-ESES 中观察到的认知缺陷。我们的研究采用先进的神经影像学和神经心理学评估方法,严格研究了睡眠时癫痫网络(SN)内的动态功能连接(dFC)及其与 BECTS-ESES 认知障碍的相关性:在这项研究中,45 名被诊断为 BECTS-ESES 的患者和 55 名年龄匹配的健康对照者(HCs)参加了研究。我们利用静息态功能磁共振成像(fMRI)和独立成分分析(ICA)确定了三个基本的SN节点:右侧前脑岛(rAI)、左侧前脑岛(lAI)和前扣带回(ACC)。采用双样本 t 检验法比较了这些关键区域与其他脑区之间的 dFC:结果:BECTS-ESES 组的 dFC 显著增加,尤其是在 ACC 与右侧枕中回、从 rAI 到右侧顶回和小脑以及从 lAI 到左侧后中央回之间。这种dFC增强提供了可能解释BECTS-ESES儿童神经心理缺陷的神经洞察力。通过全面的神经心理学评估,我们将这些dFC干扰与特定的认知障碍进行了映射,包括记忆、执行功能、语言和注意力。通过多元回归分析和路径分析,我们发现了一种初步但却令人信服的关联,即 dFC 干扰与认知障碍直接相关。这些发现强调了SN干扰在BECTS-ESES认知功能障碍中的关键作用:局限性:我们的横断面设计和分析方法排除了确定的中介模型和因果推论,导致dFC中介作用的确切性质及其对BECTS-ESES的直接影响部分悬而未决。未来需要进行纵向和确证研究,以全面界定这些关联:我们的研究预示着SN内的dFC是小儿癫痫认知障碍的重要生物标志物,主张在管理BECTS-ESES时采取有针对性的认知特异性干预措施。我们的研究结果是初步的,需要进一步研究来证实这些关联,为 BECTS-ESES 的预后和治疗策略提供深远的影响,从而强调这项研究在儿科神经学和癫痫管理领域的重要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.00
自引率
1.80%
发文量
153
审稿时长
56 days
期刊介绍: Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry is an international and multidisciplinary journal which aims to ensure the rapid publication of authoritative reviews and research papers dealing with experimental and clinical aspects of neuro-psychopharmacology and biological psychiatry. Issues of the journal are regularly devoted wholly in or in part to a topical subject. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry does not publish work on the actions of biological extracts unless the pharmacological active molecular substrate and/or specific receptor binding properties of the extract compounds are elucidated.
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